In this divorce action the libel sets forth indignities as the cause of complaint and avers that respondent is non compos mentis, having been so declared by this court on March 8, 1938, and having been confined ever since in the Harrisburg State Hospital and the Veterans’ Hospital at Coates-ville, Pa. A subpoena was awarded on August 25, 1945, returnable on the first Monday of October 1945, and on October 2nd, the day after the return day, the subpoena was returned non est inventus. On August 27, 1945, libellant made application to the court for the appointment of a guardian ad litem of respondent as an incompetent party, and in proceedings intended to be in accordance with the procedure set forth in Pa. R. C. P. 2051-75, governing incompetents as parties, a member of the bar of the county was, on
Section 30 of the Divorce Law of May 22, 1929, P. L. 1237, as amended by the Act of May 18, 1937, P. L. 719, provides, inter alia:
“In cases where the respondent is a hopeless lunatic, or non compos mentis, the service of the subpoena in divorce shall be made as provided in this act, but such service shall be made upon the committee of such lunatic or person non compos mentis.”
In Collins v. Collins, 86 Pa. Superior Ct. 43, it was decided that a guardian appointed for an insane or weak-minded person under the Act of May 28, 1907, P. L. 292, is not a guardian of the person of his ward and does not have all the power and authority of a committee in lunacy and that service of a subpoena in divorce on such guardian is defective and irregular. See also Hauger v. Hauger, 22 D. & C. 51, holding that a subpoena may not be served on a guardian ad litem. Both of these cases were decided before the promulgation of the Pa. R. C. P. 2051-75 relating to incompetents as parties. These rules and Rules. 2026-50 relating to minors as parties define “action”, when used in the rules, as meaning “. . . any civil
“(a) When an incompetent is a defendant, original process may be served on him in the manner prescribed for the service of like process on a competent defendant, or may be served on his guardian appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction within this Commonwealth.”
Section 30 of the Divorce Law of 1929 is so inconsistent with this last quoted rule as to be deemed to be suspended by Rule 2075, and we must determine, from a consideration of Rule 2055, the person who may be served with the subpoena in divorce when respondent is incompetent. The latter rule says that the subpoena may be served on defendant or his guardian appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction. In Rule 2051, “guardian”, except where the context otherwise indicates, is defined as meaning “the guardian, committee or other fiduciary appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction for the person or estate of an habitual drunkard, a weak-minded person or a person of unsound mind”. The words “a court of competent jurisdiction” in both Rules 2051 and 2055 relate to a particular county court authorized by statute to appoint a committee in lunacy or a guardian for an incompetent person, and the jurisdiction of such court depends on the residence or domicile of the incompetent person. Also, a guardian ad litem is not the guardian of a person or the estate of the ward. In paragraph (b) it is provided that a pleading or other paper may be served on an incompetent’s guardian or guardian
Another question is whether the provisions of section 53 of the Divorce Law of 1929 have been complied with. That section says:
“Upon the hearing of any case before the court, a master or jury, where the petition or libel sets forth that the respondent is a lunatic, the question of lunacy shall be fully established by expert testimony, together with every other matter of fact that is affirmed by one party and denied by the other. No divorce shall be granted to the libellant, in any such case, unless it be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the respondent is hopelessly insane, but, if any respondent has been for 10 or more years an inmate of any asylum for the insane, it shall be conclusive proof of hopeless insanity.”
This section is, as Judge McCluskey said of it in Frederick v. Frederick, 47 D. & C. 265, somewhat perplexing. It is also, in our opinion, unduly burdensome on libellant in requiring that the court refuse him a divorce unless the insanity of respondent is proved, by expert testimony and beyond a reasonable doubt, to be hopeless. If libellant establishes his ground for divorce by evidence of the quality and quantity required and if the rights of an incompetent respondent are guarded by a guardian ad litem appointed by the court, why
The only witness as to the mental condition of respondent, excepting some testimony by libellant herself, was Dr. R. R. Stoner. The qualifications of Dr. Stoner as an expert on mental diseases were admitted by the master. The record does not show that the guardian ad litem admitted the qualifications, and it is questionable whether such a guardian has the authority to make such an admission, as he is supposed to combat the efforts of libellant to get a divorce and not to ease the way for him. In a court trial, a party has a right to waive proof of the qualifications of an expert witness for his adversary, but the trial judge has no such right. It is the function of the trial judge to decide whether a witness has qualified as an expert, but he may not waive proof of his qualifications. Similarly, a master has no authority to admit the qualifications of a witness as an expert. The fact that Dr. Stoner is a doctor of medicine is not enough to class him as an expert on mental diseases. He should have proved his education and experience in mental diseases. He examined respondent twice in 1938, once as one of a commission of three appointed under the Mental Health Act of 1923, and found that respondent was abusive to his wife, went into violent rages without provocation, and had hallucinations that people were persecuting
Decree
And now, June 18, 1946, the service of the alias subpoena is set aside, the appointment of the master is revoked, and all proceedings before him are set aside.
