125 Ga. 89 | Ga. | 1906
(After stating the facts.) The Georgia State Sanitarium is a public institution sustained by the State for the care of such of its citizens as may have become bereft of reason, either temporarily or permanently. In the establishment and maintenance of this benign charitable institution, not only was the protection of the body politic from the violently insane considered, but a means was provided for the treatment by skilled physicians of persons .whose unfortunate mental condition might be improved or cured under the facilities there afforded. Two methods of commitment to the asylum are provided for by statute. One is under section 2582 of the Civil Code, the other under section 2573. When an insane person has no guardian, or where the guardian of an
An altogether different procedure is pointed out by section 2573, to be observed whenever a person believed to be mentally unbalanced, though neither violent nor unable to look after his own immediate safety, is without a guardian. A formal petition, under oath and alleging either that he is “liable to have a guardian appointed” or that he is “subject to be committed” to the State Sanitarium, must be duly presented to the ordinary, who, “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,” is authorized to issue a commission directed to a specified number of disinterested and discreet, persons, including a physician, who, after being duly sworn, shall “examine by inspection” the person whose sanity is questioned and hear testimony, if necessary, as to his mental condition, and. who shall “make return of such examination and inquiry” to the-ordinary, therein specifying whether or not it is proper to commit him to the asylum or appoint for him a guardian. Upon this return the ordinary may enter up an appropriate judgment, but it is by no means conclusive, either upon the party applying for the commission or upon the person alleged to be insane. Either may appeal to a jury in the superior court, the latter being allowed to do so in his own name, if capable, or through any friend or relative. Civil Code, §2575. If a guardian be appointed by the ordinary, he:
In the present case, the petition presented to the ordinary alleged merely that I. E. Pair had recently become insane, and for that
Judgment reversed.