Morton v. Sims

64 Ga. 298 | Ga. | 1879

Bleckley, Justice.

1. The proceedings to put Dr. Sims under guardianship did not take place in the court of ordinary proper. In issuing the commission, and in appointing the guardiaD, the ordinary exercised a special and limited jurisdiction, regulated by sections 1855 and 1856 of the Code. The proceedings which these sections provide for are swift and summary, *301and must therefore be construed strictly. They should show on their face such facts, especially touching the giving of notice, as will authorize the legal appointment of a guardian. This degree of strictness holds as to all courts of limited jurisdiction. 9 Ga., 185; 12 Ib., 424; 13 Ib., 68. In ruling upon the motion to set aside the judgment appointing a guardian for Dr. Sims, the question is, whether upon the face of that judgment, reading it in connection with the balance of the record to which it belongs, enough appears to show that it was duly rendered. The trial is to be by inspection, and consists only in comparing the judgment and its preliminaries with the law.

2. After declaring that ordinaries may appoint guardians for idiots, lunatics, persons insane or deaf and dumb, habitual drunkards, and for “ persons imbecile from old age or other cause, and incapable of managing their estates,” the Code goes on to point out the mode of procedure as follows: §1855. “Upon the petition of any person on oath setting forth that another is liable to have a guardian appointed under the provisions of this article, the ordinary, upon proof that ten days’ notice of such application has been given to the three nearest adult relatives of such person, or that there is no such relative within this state, shall issue a commission directed to any eighteen discreet and proper persons, one of whom shall be a physician, requiring any twelve of them, including the physician, to examine by inspection the person for whom guardianship is sought, and to hear and examine witnesses on oath, if necessary, as to his condition and capacity to manage his estate, and to make return of such examination and inquiry to the said ordinary, specifying in said return under which of said classes they find him to come. Such commissioners shall be first sworn by a justice df the peace, well and truly to execute the said commission to the best of their skill and ability,’ which oath shall be returned with their verdict.” §1856. “Upon such return finding the person to be as alleged in the petition, or within either of said classes, the *302ordinary shall appoint a guardian for him.” There is to be a petition on oath, with proof of ten days’ notice of the application to three of the nearest adult relatives, or proof that no adult relative of the alleged imbecile is within this state. The proof made was only that the petitioners themselves were the three nearest adult relatives residing in this state, to whom notice could be given under the statute. Of course, it would be absurd for the petitioners to give notice to themselves of their own application, and this being so, they are not the relatives appointed by the statute to receive notice. They are simply to be counted out, just as' if they were not relatives at all, and the notice ought to have been given to the three next nearest relatives within the state, and the ordinary had no power to issue the commission without proof that it had been given, or else that there was here no adult relative to be notified. The scheme of the statute is to serve notice upon three, if that many are here, and if there be less than that many, upon two or one, as the case may be. If none is here, then according to the letter of the statute, the ordinary may proceed upon proof of that fact; but, we think, as matter of practice, and to comply with the spirit of the statute, as well as of the general law, it would be better for the ordinary to require the notice to be given to the alleged imbecile himself, or else designate by order a guardian ad litem to receive notice for him. It is, to say the least, doubtful whether the property of an adult citizen can be taken out of his custody and committed to guardianship without previous warning served either upon him or upon some person duly constituted by law or by some legal tribunal to be notified in his stead. “If it was unreasonable, in the opinion of the Roman governor, to send a prisoner and not to signify withal the crimes alleged against him, the law judges it to be equally so, to pass upon the dearest civil rights of the citizen, without first giving him notice of his adversary’s complaint.” 6 Ga., 483. “ The truth is, that at the door of every temple of the laws in this broad *303land, stands justice, with her preliminary requirement upon all administrators — You shall condemn no man unheard.’ The requirement is as old at least as magna oharta. It is the most precious of all gifts of freedom, that no man be disseized of his property, or deprived of his liberty, or in any way in jured, ‘ nisi per legale judioixom jparium suorum, vel per legem terrae? ” 5 Ga., 516. “It is a principle of natural justice which courts are never at liberty to dispense with, unless under the mandate of positive law, that no person shall be condemned unheard.” 9 Ga., 188. In the present case, however, the petitioners did not carry their proof far enough to enable the ordinary to issue the commission even on 1he letter of the statute, for they neither proved notice to any relative, nor that there was no relative to be notified. They treated themselves as representing both sides of the ease because they were the nearest relatives, whereas, there is no hint in the statute that those whose duty it is to give notice are competent to receive it, or that it will be dispensed with because they would be the persons to be notified if others and not themselves were petitioners. Nothing is more certain than that there was a failure to» comply with the statute in respect to the important step of notice, and for that defect in the proceedings the judgment appointing the guardian was properly set aside.

3. We think there was not any saving efficacy in the fact that Dr. Sims was present at the so-called trial, and was also •represented by counsel, even if the counsel did consent to the judgment. The system of the statute is one of coercion, not of consent. If a man is really an imbecile he is incapable of consenting, and what he does by his counsel is no better than if he did it in person. Any consent of counsel is at bottom the consent of his client — nothing more. It is not pretended that either of them was before the ordinary when the commission was issued, or that there was any opportunity afforded to object to that part of the ordinary’s action. The misstep was in issuing the commission, without *304requiring the petitioners to comply with the law as to notice. The object of notice is that there may be due warning to make objection for legal cause to the commission or any of the commissioners, as well as to prepare for adducing evidence on the main question. The notice is to precede by ten days the issuing of the'commission. Why is this, if not for both of the purposes which we have specified ? There was too much haste. The commission issued one day, was executed the next, and the judgment appointing the guardian followed immediately. Action, trial and judgment in two days, and no previous notice! The surprise and shock of such swift inquisition into an old gentleman’s wits might so confound him as to prepare him for consenting, through his counsel, to being adjudged an imbecile.

Judgment affirmed.

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