54 Ga. App. 707 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
Before the act of August 25, 1925 (Ga. L. 1925, pp. 270-272), authorizing the ordinaries of this State to appoint, guardians for insane persons without a trial, merely upon the “ certificate of the regional manager in charge of the United States Veterans’ Bureau in Georgia, or of the medical officer in charge of any government hospital for mental and nervous diseases, that such veteran of the world war has been declared by the United States Government as incompetent to receive the funds to be paid to him” by such government, as amended by the act of August 5, 1929 (Ga. L. 1929, pp. 245-256; Code, §§ 49-801-49-816), providing for a certificate by the director of the United States Veterans’ Bureau or his authorized representative, “setting forth the fact that such person has been rated incompetent by the bureau on examination in accordance with the laws and regulations governing such bureau,” and further with prescribed procedure, the former law (Code of 1910, § 3103) provided: “The ordinaries of the several counties of this State are authorized to appoint guardians for idiots, lunatics, and insane persons, without a trial, as in section 3092 [requiring ten days notice to the three nearest adult relatives, the appointment of a commission, its examination of the person, and subsequent proceedings], whenever it shall be made to appear to them that such idiot, lunatic, or insane person is in the Georgia State Sanitarium upon commitment thereto, or when it is shown by the certificate of the superintendent of the lunatic asylum in which the party is confined that such person is hopelessly insane, and it is necessary for such idiot, lunaticor insane person to have a guardian to take charge of his
“The contract of an insane person, a lunatic, or a person non compos mentis, who has never been adjudicated to be insane, or a lunatic, or of unsound mind as prescribed by the Code, is not absolutely void, but only voidable, except that a contract made by such person during a lucid interval is valid without ratification. After the fact that such person is insane, a lunatic, or non compos mentis has been established by a court of competent jurisdiction in this State, and the affairs of such person are vested in a guardian, the power of such person to contract, even though restored to sanity, is entirely gone, and such contracts are absolutely void until the guardianship is dissolved.” Code, § 20-206. This present codificaton of the law, in the light of late decisions of the Supreme Court, enlarges and somewhat modifies the language of
In this case the validity of the appointment of the first guardian for the alleged incompetent must be determined under the Code of 1910, §§ 3092-3098 and 3103, as they existed before the amendment of 1925 (Ga. L. 1925, pp. 270-272), providing for the appointment of a guardian for an insane war veteran, without the proceedings required in other cases, merely upon the " certificate” of a regional manager of the veterans’ bureau in this State, or of the "medical officer in charge of any government hospital for mental and nervous diseases,” and before the amendment of 1929 (Ga. L. 1929, pp. 248-256; Code, § 49-801 et seq.), since all of the proceedings for the appointment of the first guardian occurred before these amendments. Under the original law, it was the general rule that service of notice to the three nearest adult relatives of the alleged incompetent, as to the application for the appointment of a guardian, is "jurisdictional,” and that an appointment without the service of such notice "is void and is subject to collateral attack.” Blackwell v. Parks, 166 Ga. 631 (144 S. E. 24); Hart v. Manson, 119 Ga. 865 (47 S. E. 345); Yeomans v. Williams, 117 Ga. 800 (45 S. E. 73); Allen v. Barnwell, 120 Ga. 537 (48 S. E. 176); Helton v. Helton, 47 Ga. App. 845, 848 (171 S. E. 845); Payne v. Shirley, 25 Ga. App. 644 (3) (104 S. E. 17). The Code of 1910, § 3103, provided for an appointment "without a trial, as in § 3092,” when it is made to appear that the person has already been committed and is confined in the Georgia State Sanitarium, "or when it is shown, by the certificate of the superintendent of the lunatic asylum in which the party is confined, that such person is hopelessly insane, and it is necessary for such [person] to have a guardian to take charge of his property.”
In this action in trover, by a second guardian appointed for the alleged incompetent in 1933 after the resignation of the first guardian, brought against a bank for recovery of cotton and warehouse receipts, which the alleged incompetent in 1930 and 1931 had pledged to the bank as collateral for a $3500 loan, the undisputed evidence showed that at the time of the transaction in question the alleged incompetent was sane or was capable of transacting business during a period, of lucid interval. The void order of 1935 not affecting such proved competency, the court properly directed the verdict for the defendant.
The order of 1935. being void under the undisputed evidence supporting the attack in the plea on its validity, the plaintiff’s exceptions pendente lite, so far as based on the grounds of de
Judgment affirmed.