39 Mo. App. 388 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
By the constitution of Missouri (art. 6, sec. 34), the probate courts established by the general assembly are invested with “jurisdiction over all matters pertaining to * * * the appointment of guardians and curators of minors and persons of unsound mind.” By statute, after an inquisition in a mode prescribed, “if it be found by the jury'that the subject of the inquiry is of unsound mind, and incapable of managing his or her affairs, the court shall appoint a guardian of the person and estate of such insane person.” R. S. 1879, sec. 5791. The person so appointed is required to enter into a bond “conditioned that he will take due and proper care of such insane person, and manage and administer his estate and effects to the best advantage,” etc. R. S., sec. 5795. By another section of the same chapter, “ every such guardian shall take charge of the person committed to his charge, and provide for his support and maintenance as hereinafter directed.” R. S., sec. 5799. By the next section, “it shall be his duty to collect and take into his' possession the goods, chattels, moneys and effects, books and other evidences of debt, and all writings touching the estate, real and personal, of the person under his guardianship.”
In the case before us the probate judge, unable to find any person who would accept the office of guardian of the person of Rutherford Easley, the plaintiff, because of his being dangerously insane, appointed A. J. Dye to be the curator of his estate merely; and in this character the plaintiff, by Dye, has brought the present action on an account. A motion was made to dismiss the action, on the ground that the plaintiff (meaning Dye) has no right or legal capacity to sue. Upon this
We have come to the conclusion, though not without some hesitation, that where a person has been adjudged insane, in conformity with the statute, and no one can be found who will accept the office of guardian of his person, because of his dangerous character, the court has power, for the purpose of conserving his estate, to appoint a guardian of his estate merely; and we attach no importance to the fact that the order of appointment designates the appointee as “curator” instead of “guardian,” — the meaning of the two words, when applied to the care of an estate merely, being the same. A very strict reading of the statute might lead to the conclusion that the grant of .jurisdiction is to appoint a person who shall be at once guardian of the person and of the estate of the insane person; but we think that it is capable of being read in conformity with the mathematical axiom, that the whole includes all its parts, so as to reach the conclusion that a grant of jurisdiction to appoint a guardian of the person and of the estate includes a jurisdiction to appoint a guardian of the estate only, where insurmountable obstacles preclude the appointment of a guardian who will act in both capacities.
We do not question the soundness of the view taken by the court of errors of Connecticut, that a statute providing for the appointment of an overseer of an insane person is in derogation of common right and of the liberty of the citizen, and must be construed strictly. Strong v. Birchard, 5 Conn. 357. But this principle applies rather to the question whether a person shall be adjudged incapable of taking care of himself, so as to be restrained of his liberty, or whether he shall be
But we need not extend illustrations of this principle. We could hardly suggest a fitter case for its application than the one before us. The primary effort of all statutory interpretation is to discover, in the language of the statute, the intention of the legislature as applied to the state of facts before the court. We
We add that, in our opinion, even assuming that the probate court, in the appointment in this case, exceeded its jurisdiction, the sureties on the curator’s bond would be estopped from setting up that fact.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.