58 N.C. 417 | N.C. | 1860
The plaintiff alleges in her bill that the defendants, without notice to her and in an irregular and oppressive manner, had proceeded in the county court of Wilkes to have an inquisition of lunacy made as to her, had succeeded in having her declared a lunatic, and had had themselves appointed her guardians. The bill sets out the various particulars in which the proceedings was irregular and erroneous, avers the soundness of her intellect, and prays that the court will order "that a jury may be summoned to make inquiry and return a verdict as to the plaintiff's state of mind," and for general relief.
The defendants answered, denying the allegations as to errors in the proceeding, and denying that the plaintiff is of sound mind, etc. On the coming in of the answers, the court ordered "that issues should be submitted to a jury to try whether the complainant, Priscilla Dowell, was a lunatic, non compos mentis and insane, at the filing of the petition in the county court," and, secondly, "whether she is insane at this time."
With this order, the defendants being dissatisfied, they appealed to this Court. The pleadings in this case present the question whether the court of equity in this State has the power to issue a commission for the purpose of having the inquisition of a jury whether a person be an idiot or lunatic; or, in other words, whether it has jurisdiction of the inquiry, whether idiot or lunatic, or not. This is an important and *328 interesting question, and one which has not hitherto, so far as we are aware, been brought before this Court for adjudication. In the investigation of this subject, it may aid us to ascertain in what court or person this jurisdiction was vested in England.
Adams Equity, after speaking of the jurisdiction of the court of chancery in relation to infants, and the mode in which it is called into operation by the filing of a bill to which the infant is a party, makes the following remarks upon the subject of lunacy: "The similarity of principle between the jurisdictions in infancy and lunacy would lead us to anticipate their exercise through the same channel and in the same form of procedure, viz., through the court of chancery in a regular suit. In this respect, however, a material distinction exists. The jurisdiction in lunacy is exercised, not by the court of chancery in a regular suit, but by the Lord Chancellor personally on petition; and the appeal, if his order be erroneous, is to the King in council, and not to the House of Lords." Adams Eq., 290. The mere lunacy does not originate the jurisdiction, but there must be an inquisition by a jury, finding the fact that the person is a lunatic. To do this, the regular course is to issue a commission under the great seal in the nature of a writ of de lunaticoinquirendo to ascertain whether the party is of unsound mind. This mode of proceeding has superseded "the old way, which was by writs directed to the sheriff or escheator." See Stock on Non Compotes, 15 Law Lib., marginal page, 86 et seq., where the subject is fully discussed and explained. The proceedings under the commission in England are now regulated by statute. Adams Eq., 292, which refers to 3 4 (419) Will. IV., chap. 36; 5 6 Vict., chap. 84, and 8 9 Vict., chap. 100, sec. 2. In this country, under the colonial government, there can be very little doubt that the court of chancery had and exercised jurisdiction over idiots and lunatics and their estates (Latham v. Wiswall,
Our conclusion is, that the court of equity of Wilkes had no authority to make the order for an inquisition by a jury as to the lunacy of the plaintiff, and that consequently such order was erroneous and must be
PER CURIAM. Reversed.
Cited: Dowell v. Jacks,