135 N.Y.S. 176 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1912
“But a marriage shall not be annulled at the suit of a party who was of age of legal consent when it was contracted.”
This indicates that, where the Legislature intended to restrict the right to maintain an action for an annulment in this class of cases, it expressly confined such right to the party who had not reached the age of legal consent. It is safe to assume that, if the legislative purpose was to limit annulment actions in cases of lunacy to those brought by or on behalf of the lunatic, it would have been so provided in express terms.
“make or cause to be made entries from time to time of the mental state, bodily condition and medical treatment of such patient during the time such patient remains under his care. * * * ”
Section 93 provides for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus upon application of the insane person, or some friend in his behalf, and directs that: '
“Upon return of such writ the fact of his insanity shall be inquired into and determined. The medical history of the patient as it appears in the case book shall be given in evidence, and the superintendent or medical officer in charge of the institution wherein such person is held in custody, and any proper person, shall be sworn touching the mental condition of such person.”
Section 40 of the Insanity Law provides for the maintenance of state hospitals for the poor and indigent insane, among them being “Central Islip State Hospital,” to which the defendant was committed, and) with which the medical witness in this case was officially connected. Section 45 expressly provides for “the care and treatment of the patients,” and for personal examination of the condition of each patient in these hospitals.
The public policy of the state demands the maintenance of such institutions and the care and treatment of the inmates, which necessarily involve their medical examination. I do not think that the relation arising by operation of law between a patient committed by legal process to a state institution for the insane and the official physicians in charge thereof is within the professional relation contemplated by section 834 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or that such section was designed to exclude the testimony of such official physicians, whose' duty it is under the police power of the state to make physical examinations of irresponsible patients. The purpose of the protection being here absent, the legislative enactments as to the duties of medical
Judgment of annulment for plaintiff.