118 Ky. 445 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion op the court by.
Reversing.
Henry Michaels was found a person of unsound mind by an inquest held in the Jefferson circuit court without notice to him or his presence at the proceeding. He was committed to the Central Kentucky Asylum for the Insane, and This suit was filed by it to recover compensation for taking care of him. The proof shows that he was in fact insane, and that it was necessary for him to be in an insane asylum. The inquest, being held without notice to him or his presence ft the trial, was void. Still, as he was in fact insane, the asylum may recover for necessaries furnished him on a quantum meruit, just as a recovery may be had for necessaries furnished an infant. But it appears in this case that Michaels, while an inmate of the asylum, except for the first few months of his confinement, -worked for it, driving a cart, digging a ditch, and doing other such work on the farm run by it, he being a stout man, and able ic work. When the asylum claims under a quantum meruit for necessaries furnished one who has not legally been found of unsound mind, its claim rests upon the idea that it should be allowed compensation in justice and right for that which it is out on account of the lunatic. If the lunatic’s services have been worth to it as much as his keep was worth, it is in fact out nothing. A man who takes care of an infant, and seeks compensation on a quantum meruit for necessaries
On all the evidence in this case we conclude that the labor of the lunatic was of value as much as his board and keep at the asylum during the time sued for, and that no recovery, during this period, for his keep, can be allowed.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the petition.