114 Ky. 831 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Reversing.
Lawrence Pfanmiller died intestate, an inmate of the Central Lunatic Asylum for the Insane of this State, on the 2d of December, 1899. He had been admitted under a verdict and judgment of the Jefferson circuit court (criminal division) May 4, 1897. At that time he had a family — his wife and one infant child. There were a number of children who were grown and had left home. Pfanmiller owned a small piece of real property in the city of Louisville, worth about $700 or $800. He had owned it for a number of years, and occupied it as a homestead. A short while before he was found to be a lunatic, he and his wife, because of their old age' and infirmities, induced one of their married daughters to move into the house with them, and to assume its expense and care. The old folks were unable to provide for them: selves, and were extremely poor. After Lawrence Pfanmiller. was adjudged a lunatic and sent to the asylum, his wife continued to live at the home until her death, February 18, 1898. Something over three months after the death of Lawrence Pfanmiller appellee was appointed his administrator by the Jefferson county court upon the motion of the Central Lunatic Asylum for the Insane, and within a few days afterwards brought this suit against the heirs of Pfanmiller to subject the house and lot to the payment of the debts of the decedent. The only claim asserted or filed against his estate was one for $515 by the Central Lunatic Asylum, being the charge at the rate of $200 per annum for the board and support of Pfanmiller for the period during which he was confined there. Formal and somewhat elaborate preparation of the action was had in which the above claim was allowed, as a result of which the commissioner reported costs incurred in the action to the extent of $261.55 $150 of which was a fee to the administrator’s attorney,
The State has provided these charitable institutions at its expense for the care, of those unfortunates whose mental condition requires them to be forcibly restrained. The system provides that those who are, or whose parents are, able financially to/ support them, must pay to the asylum the same charge for their keeping as is allowed by the State for the maintenance of pauper lunatics kept there. Section 256, Kentucky Statutes, reads as follows: “An insane person shall be held to be a pauper if unable to pay six months’ board in advance, or, if married, be unable to pay said board besides providing for others naturally dependent; or, if a minor, the parent of said persons are unable .to pay board besides supporting others naturally dependent on them. The court holding the inquest shall require the jury to return a finding on this subject, and this verdict shall be binding upon the superintendent.” Lawrence Pfanmiller was admitted under this section as a pauper, and properly so. The jury had found and the judgment of the circuit court had adjudged, him to be a pauper. He was manifestly unable to pay the board besides- providing for the others naturally dependent upon him, namely, his wife and minor child. (Section 257 of Kentucky Statutes is: “Where patients; who have been or may be supported in either of said asylums, have or shall acquire estate which can be subjected to debt, the board of commissioners of such asylum, when reliably informed of the fact, is authorized and directed, in every such case, to sue for, in the
This brings us to the consideration of another feature of this suit; that is, the right of the administrator to maintain this action under the circumstances, and especially of the liability of decedent’s real estate to the rather extraordinary bill of cost brought about by this suit. No one could have died with less of personal estate than Lawrence Pfanmiller had, for he had none. The record shows that he had not even a rag, nor was it supposed that he had. He had been admitted to the asylum as a pauper. It knew that fact, and had so entered it upon its books. It procured the appointment of the administrator, and doubtless apprised him of .the condition of the decedent’s estate so far as it had information. Nor is there a suggestion in the record, save as to the item of taxes, which we will notice presently, that the decedent owed anything besides the
“Sec. 3894. When any person shall die intestate, that court shall have jurisdiction to grant administration on his estate that would have jurisdiction to probate his will had he made one.”
“Sec. 4849. Wills shall be proved before, and admitted to record by the county court of the county of the testator’s residence; if he had no known place of residence in this Commonwealth, and land is devised, then in the county where the land, or part thereof, lies; if no land is devised then in the county where he died, or that wherein his estate, or part thereof, shall be, or where there may be any debt or demand owing to him.”
The decedent’s place of residence in this Commonwealth was Jefferson county. Therefore, under these statutes, that court had jurisdiction to appoint an administrator. Jurisdiction to appoint an administrator, however, does not mean that an administrator is necessarily to be appointed in the case of every one who dies intestate. If the court deem it proper, or probably even if it have doubts about the propriety of the appointment, it should be made. The' rights and duties of such administrator are another question. His right is to have the possession and custody of
An effort was made to show that the decedent owed taxes to the city of Louisville when the suit was brought. The taxes had been assessed, it is true, on the 1st of September, but were not due until some time after this suit was brought. The city did not present a claim, and is not claiming in this action that decedent owed it anything for taxes or otherwise. The tax was against the real property, and a lien thereon, it is true, but it is not a debt; and, at any rate, there was no excuse for this premature suit to have the property subjected to its payment by a suit in chancery before there had been default by those legally chargeable therewith.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.