20 Pa. Super. 296 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
There was a verdict for the plaintiff, but the court entered judgment in favor of the defendant non obstante veredicto, upon a question of law reserved. The question reserved involved only the legal effect of the record of a proceeding in lunacy, a;nd a sale of the land in question under an order of the court of common pleas in that proceeding. The title of the defendant was dependent upon the validity of the sale in the lunacy proceeding. If the court of common pleas had jurisdiction to decree the sale, upon the face of the record as it then stood, the judgment of the court below must be affirmed. The record upon which the defendant relied established that by inquisition, duly returned on August 24, 1896, in accordance with the provisions of the Act of June 13, 1836, P. L. 592, Hanford L. Spaulding was found to be a lunatic; that on the same day Charles E. Bullock was appointed committee of the person and
The effect of the return of an inquisition finding the subject of the inquiry a lunatic is to take out of the hands of the person so found to be incapacitated the control and management of all his property. He cannot, so long as the finding of the inquisition remains unreversed, make any contract involving his estate. The finding of the inquisition, after its return, is conclusive of the question of the capacity of the alleged lunatic until revoked: Clark v. Caldwell, 6 Watts, 139; Bixler v. Gilleland, 4 Pa. 156; Imhoff v. Witmer’s Administrator, 31 Pa. 243. These cases conclusively establish that the contractual capacity is not restored during the pendency of a traverse of the inquisition. The incapacity of the lunatic, during the period of the contest involved in determining the traverse, made it necessary that the law which took from him the power to manage his own affairs should supply a guardian having power to take care of his person and collect, manage and dispose of his estate. The 13th section of the act of 1836 met this necessity, by enacting that: “ It shall be lawful for the court after the return of the inquisition as aforesaid, notwithstanding any traverse of the same that may be pending, to make such orders touching the care and custody of the person, and the management and safekeeping of the estates of any person, so found to be a lunatic or habitual drunkard, as they shall think
The jurisdiction thus conferred involves the exercise of a power to sell the property of a living man for the payment of
The judgment is reversed and judgment is now entered upon the verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.