48 Minn. 58 | Minn. | 1892
The contest in this case is between plaintiff, as grantee in a deed from one McLennan, executed July 12, 1876, but not recorded till October 10, 1889, and defendant, as grantee in a deed from the same grantor, executed February 26, 1886, and recorded June 21,1886. Plaintiff assails this deed on the ground that when he executed it the grantor was insane. To prove this he introduced on the trial proceedings before the judge of probate in St. Louis county, had under 1878 G. S. ch. 35, § 21, in which on November 12,1885, McLennan was committed to the hospital for the insane at St. Peter, as an insane person needing care and treatment. It was also proved that February 4, 1886, he was, by the superintendent of the hospital, permitted to leave it under charge of his •friends, and May 5th following was legally discharged from it. This was the only evidence on the question of his mental capacity to execute the deed to defendant. The question in the case is as to the •effect of these proceedings, as evidence of MeLennan’s incompeteney to execute the deed to defendant. At the common law an inquisition finding one a lunatic upon the writ de lunático inqiñrendo was evidence of his lunacy as to any one and in collateral proceedings; and plaintiff claims that the finding upon the proceeding before the probate judge is the same in effect as such inquisition. The section of ¡statute referred to authorizes the judge of probate, or, in his absence, the court commissioner, upon information being filed before him that there is an insane person in his county needing care and
Order affirmed.
(Opinion published 50 N. W. Rep. 934.)