281 N.W. 867 | Minn. | 1938
Lead Opinion
Upon the petition of appellant the probate court of Hennepin county, by order of March 12, 1935, appointed Edward J. Loring as guardian of her estate, consisting of personal property of the value of about $50,000, and real estate from which an annual income *478 of $15,000 is derived. Appellant is about 40 years of age. Loring duly qualified. June 26, 1935, appellant petitioned the court to be restored to capacity, therein erroneously stating that she had been adjudged incompetent and that Loring was the appointed guardian of both her person and estate. She alleged that she was of sound mind and capable of taking care of herself and her estate. Her petition was heard by O.J. Anderson, the probate judge of Wright county, acting for the probate judge of Hennepin county. Judge Anderson's decision, dated July 24, 1935, recognizes that appellant in her petition for restoration had erroneously stated that her person was under guardianship, for he states that the files and records disclose that Loring "was appointed guardian of her estate only," and also that, "it further appearing from the files that the said Clara Kirsch Carpenter is not declared mentally incompetent, and no order for restoration is therefore necessary, but it being claimed by the said guardian that, by reason of her physical condition, and her inability to properly handle money, a guardian of her estate should be continued," but whereas Loring did not desire to continue and in open court stated that upon her written request to resign, he would resign and file his final account within 14 days after receiving such notice, the court ordered the petition for restoration dismissed and directed that when such final account was filed by Loring a time and place be fixed for hearing on its allowance and notice to be published and copy of such account served on appellant. Loring did resign and filed his final account as guardian, and, on due notice, the final account came before the court for allowance on September 13, 1935. In the order allowing it, made September 25, 1935, the court recites that on that day appellant renewed her petition for restoration and that it came up for hearing, and then the order finds as facts that the account filed by Loring was correct and his services rendered were of the value of $300, and further: "That said ward was on the 12th day of March, 1935, an incompetent person and was so found and adjudicated by this court at said time; that her incompetency still exists"; that the petition for restoration should be denied, and that Zenith E. Cline be appointed guardian of "the person and estate" of appellant. In her *479 petition of September 25 appellant stated that she had been informed and believes from conversations had with her attorneys and statements made to her by the court that it is the "intention to appoint another guardian of her property or person, or both," upon Loring's removal, against which she earnestly protests, because "she is now in good mental and physical health and capable of managing her own affairs, including her own person and her property," and that she has been advised that under the law the court has no power to appoint a guardian of her property or person, except upon competent testimony the court can determine that she is mentally or physically incompetent to act for herself. That there has no such proof been submitted to the court or is contained in its records, wherefore it is beyond the power and jurisdiction of the court to appoint a guardian. However, her petition proceeds: "If, however, the court is of the opinion that it possesses the power, upon the record as it now stands, to lawfully make such appointment, she, in her own right," asks that Zenith E. Cline be appointed. After his appointment and qualification, Cline resigned and respondent was appointed his successor with the consent and approval of appellant as shown by her affidavit filed with the court October 2, 1935. March 16, 1936, appellant filed the petition here involved to expunge certain erroneous statements from the record and annul the proceedings as void on the ground of want of jurisdiction. The probate court denied the petition by order dated June 5, 1936, which order, after reciting appearance by the attorneys, proceeds:
"And the court, after duly hearing the evidence adduced in said matter and being fully advised in the premises finds the following facts:
"1. That since this matter was submitted to the court, the petitioner herein has filed a petition asking that she be restored to capacity; that by filing said petition, said petitioner obviously admits that she has been adjudicated incompetent.
"2. That said petition for restoration has been duly heard and submitted, and the issue therein involved will be decided by a separate order. *480
"3. That by reason of the above facts, it is the conclusion of this court that the petition of said ward above mentioned, should be denied."
And it was so ordered. Manifestly the facts found do not sustain the conclusion. But since the appeal to the district court results in a trial de novo, the probate court's erroneous view or disposition of the petition of March 16, 1936, is of no importance on this appeal from the judgment of the district court. There was no oral testimony in the district court, the decision being placed upon the records above referred to in the probate court.
The motion of March 16, 1936, is not a collateral but a direct attack upon the guardianship proceedings. The probate court is by the constitution invested with jurisdiction of persons under guardianship (art. 6, § 7), but the statute regulates the manner in which a probate court is authorized to take jurisdiction of any particular estate or person. 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 8708, provides that a particular probate court is invested with authority to proceed when a petition is filed with it respecting a matter within its jurisdiction. An order made by the probate court without such petition in a matter within its jurisdiction is void and of no effect. Bombolis v. M. St. L. R. Co.
"The probate court may appoint a guardian or guardians of any person who, by reason of old age or loss or imperfection of mental faculties, is incompetent to have the management of his property, or one who by excessive drinking, gaming, idleness, or debauchery so spends or wastes his estate as to be likely to expose himself or his family to want or suffering. Such appointment may be made upon the petition of the county board, or of any relative or friend of such person, which petition shall set forth the facts, and be verified by the affidavit of the petitioner that he believes the facts stated to be true." *481
In this case there was no pretense of stating facts that brought petitioner under the second or spendthrift provision of § 8924. It is apparent from the decisions in this and other states that mere ill health or physical ailments do not warrant placing a person under guardianship. The statute itself indicates that it is the loss or imperfection of the mental faculties which justifies the court in taking jurisdiction. In Scott v. Whitely,
The placing of one not a minor under guardianship is of great importance. The very fact that it is a protective measure and for *482
the personal welfare of the one afflicted with incompetency makes it desirable that the safeguards which the statute has seen fit to provide be complied with, namely, that the petition state the existence of the incompetency designated by statute, and that the order appointing the guardian indicate that the person subjected to guardianship has been found in fact incompetent. Otherwise the record fails to disclose jurisdiction. In Michigan the necessity of a petition which discloses mental incompetency under its statutes, much like ours, is deemed essential to the jurisdiction of the probate court. In re Estate of Brown,
We do not overlook the proposition that probate courts are courts of record and their orders and judgments not subject to collateral attack in the field intrusted to them by the constitution. And from that it would follow that in a collateral attack the order appointing a guardian might be considered as implying that the court considered and found incompetency even though there was no such adjudication spread on the record; in other words, that an adjudication of incompetency was implicit in the order appointing a guardian. But, as stated before, this is a direct attack on the proceeding, and it does not appear that any orders have been made in the proceeding that will affect the rights of any other person than Mrs. Carpenter. If Mrs. Carpenter is to be placed under guardianship there should be filed in the probate court a petition which duly invests the court with jurisdiction, and upon the court determining her incompetency the court's record should so indicate.
The judgment is reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
I cannot agree that the probate court had no jurisdiction. That is because the constitution, art. 6, § 7, does not restrict its jurisdiction to persons properly under guardianship. The grant is of jurisdiction over all "persons under guardianship," without restriction or exception. We must blind ourselves to reality to say that here there was no guardianship at all. If there was, I submit, with *483 deference to the authority contra, that the probate court had jurisdiction. But there was inadvertence and resulting error of such character that the motion to vacate should have been granted in the probate court. If that be so, the order denying that motion was erroneously affirmed in the district court, and so should be reversed.
Under 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 8701, aided somewhat by § 8983, the probate court has the same power as the district court to vacate an order, judgment, or decree procured "by fraud, misrepresentation, or through surprise or excusable inadvertence or neglect." See In re Estate of Gragg,
The reach of this decision is not at all limited by the fact that this is a direct rather than a collateral attack. If the proceedings in the probate court are void for want of jurisdiction, they would be vulnerable to collateral attack anywhere and any time, even though they involved the sale of the ward's property by the guardian. Time has no forge whereon to fabricate shields for judicial proceedings void on their face. That is the condemnation we are placing on all that has been done in this case. (For the reason indicated, I think it erroneous and am confident that it is at least unnecessary.) Therein lies a danger which, in my view, we should not create unless we are compelled to when the issue is properly before us and decision one way or the other is inescapable. *484