25 A.D.2d 920 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1966
Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court at Special Term, Sullivan County, which directed that the question of respondent-appellant’s ineompeteney be tried by a jury and that he submit to a preliminary psychiatric examination. The controlling statute, section 101 of the Mental Hygiene Law, which became effective in 1963, in pertinent part provides: “(3) Contents of petition. The petition shall be verified and, insofar as can be ascertained with reasonable diligence, shall state facts showing incompetence; * *s * (5) Triai on issue of ineompeteney. Unless the court decides, in the exercise of its discretion, that the proceeding should be dismissed, it shall order a trial by jury of the issue of competency.” Prior to 1963, section 1364 of the Civil Practice Act provided that ineompeteney presumptively appear to the satisfaction of the court. The Advisory Committee on Practice and Procedure iii its discussion and explanation of subdivisions 3 and 5 of section 101 does not indicate any intent to change the presumptive proof necessary (Fourth Preliminary Report of the Advisory Committee on Practice and Procedure [Jan. 2, 1960], pp. 419-420). Indeed, both parties here agree to this interpretation, as did Special Term. In Matter of Pasternack (23 A D 2d 551), decided after the effective date of section 101, the court held that petitioner had failed to meet the burden of said section to establish the facts showing incompetence, citing cases all of which used the presumptive satisfaction test. We agree that the presumptive test survives and as long ago stated by Mr. Justice Cochrane in Matter of Clarkson “Perhaps no occasion calls for greater caution or more discerning judgment on the part of a court than a determination of the question as to whether the sanity of a person should be submitted to a jury because even though the verdict of the jury may establish mental competency the charge of ineompeteney and investigation on that point publicly made if unfounded may work much wrong to the person proceeded against.” (186 App. Div. 575, 577, affd. 227 N. Y. 599). In our opinion the petitioner, who is respondent-appellant’s daughter, has not met the requisite proof. Petitioner submitted affidavits of