97 Ky. 388 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
On January 16, 1894, a warrant ivas issued by the judge of the Lincoln County Court, reciting, among other things, that there had been filed-with him, by the county attorney of that county, in the absence of the Commonwealth’s attorney of the district, information that Lucy Ann Ends, the appellee, was, by reason of old age, of such imbecile and unsound mind as to render her incompetent to manage her estate. The warrant was addressed to the sheriff, and commanded him to bring appellee into court on the next day, January 17th, that the matter might be inquired into. The writ yas executed by the officer, and appellee being in court
The county court thereupon entered a judgment in conformity with the verdict, and subsequently appointed appellant as the committee of appellee. It appears that the information on which the warrant was based consisted of an affidavit made by two of the-daughters of appellee to the effect that, by reason of old age, their mother was incompetent to manage her estate.
On the 16th day of February, 1894, one Thomas Ends, a son of appellee, produced and filed in the circuit court of Lincoln county, a transcript of the above-mentioned proceedings in the county court, together with his own affidavit, in which he stated, among other things, that appellee was a person of sound mind and perfectly competent to manage her estate, that no suggestion of incompetency on her part had ever been heard of until a very short time before, when she had come into possession of the sum of $2,492.20, as a pensioner of the United States, and that the inquest and judgment of the county court, adjudging her to be incompetent, were false and fraudulent, and asking that the matter be inquired into. Appellant, being served with process, appeared in this proceeding in the circuit court, and after filing a general demurrer, and a motion to dismiss the proceeding, both of which were overruled, filed an answer on the 7th day of March, 1894. A jury was then impaneled to try the issue,but after hearing the evidence and arguments, and considering the case under the instructions of the court, reported that they could not agree upon a verdict,, and were discharged by the court on March 9, 1894.
Appellee then gave notice in writing to appellant that she
It seems td us unnecessary, in arriving at a correct solution of this controversy, to consider in detail all the objections urged by appellant and appellee respectively against the regularity and validity of the judgments and proceedings in the two lower courts, which are here brought in question, appellee here contending that the action of the county court was null and void, and appellant urging the same thing as against the proceedings in the circuit court. The contention of each side is presented with much force and ability, and it may be true that in neither of the lower courts were the proceedings entirely satisfactory or beyond criticism.
As to the circuit court proceeding, it may be said (hat it can not be told whether it was conducted as an appeal from the judgment of the county., court under sec. 2152, or as an
But, however this may be, we are satisfied that the proceedings in the county court were absolutely void, and that the conclusion reached by the circuit court, adjudging them to be of no effect, is the correct conclusion.
Without discussing or deciding the question whether or not the county court warrant, issued upon the affidavit of appellee’s daughters, and the inquest held in pursuance thereof, were based and instituted upon the application of the county attorney, within the meaning of sec. 2162, Kentucky Statutes, it is sufficient to say that the provisions of that section apply only to persons of “unsound mind,” and that appellee was not found, either by the verdict of the jury or the judgment of the court in that proceeding, to be a person of unsound mind. The verdict of the jury neither found this fact, nor did it find the cause or the reason of appellee’s incompetency to manage her estate, as is, in our judgment, clearly demanded by the statute. The judgment of the court entered thereon was equally defective. The verdict was: ‘We of the jury find that Lucy Ann Ends is incompetent to take care of her estate of amount $2,082.20, and ask that a committee be appointed to take charge of it.” The judgment of the court rendered in pursuance of that verdict, and the only judgment that it justified, was: “It is therefore adjudged that said Lucy Ann Ends is incompetent to
The jurisdiction of the courts to assume the care and custody of the estates of persons incompetent to manage their own estates, is limited under the statute to certain classes of incompetents. Sec. 2149, Kentucky Statutes, furnishes the authority invoked in this case and specifies the cases in which it may be exercised. It is true that the warrant issued against appellee charges that she belongs to one o'f those classes, viz.: that “by reason of old age, she is of such imbecile and unsound’mind as to render her incompetent to manage her estate.” But, while this w’as the very question to be inquired into and ascertained by the inquest, the verdict and the judgment are, as we have seen, absolutely silent on this point. As further evidence of the importance of showing within what class the incompetent may come, it is expressly provided by sec. 2155, Kentucky Statutes, with reference to the oath to be administered to the jury on these inquests, that it shall be “in such form as to ascertain by the verdict whether such person, by reason of bodily infirmity, disabling him from making his thoughts and desires known, or by reason of any infirmity or v'eight of age, is incompetent to manage his estate, and also what estate he owms in possession, reversion or remainder, and the value thereof.”
It is manifest that the reason or cause of the infirmity must be made to appear “by the verdict,” as well as what estate is owmed by the subject of the inquest, and in both of these particulars this verdict is fatally defective. So far as it shows, the incompetency in this case might be the result of infancy as well as of old age, or of lack of business experience or other cause, incapacitating and rendering appellee incompetent of managing her estate, and which might or'
This statute, like those governing the control and sale of infant’s real estate, should be strictly construed and literally followed. It affects the property rights of a large class of unfortunate people who are entitled to know, and to have the jury and the court declare, upon what grounds they are deprived of one of their most sacred and inviolable privileges — the right to manage and control, for themselves and as they may see fit, that which is their own.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment of the Lincoln Circuit Court, adjudging the proceedings of the county court which declared appellee to be incompetent of managing her estate and appointing appellant her committee to be void, and also adjudging that appellant restore to appellee all money and property that came to him as such committee, is affirmed.