96 N.J. Eq. 1 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1924
This is a divorce suit, and the defendant has preferred a petition for the appointment of a guardian ad litem for himself. His petition shows that he has been for the past four years, and still is, physically and mentally ill and unable to attend to his affairs or manage his business, and is now, and has been, under medical treatment for his said illness; that by reason of his said illness he believes that he is unable to give proper attention and care to the preparation of his defense to the petition filed against him in this cause or to consult with counsel about the full preparation of said defense in a legal, competent and proper manner; and he, therefore, prays that his mother may be appointed guardian ad litem for him to make answer and defense in this suit. His mother, in a writing annexed to the petition, consents to be appointed such guardian. Neither in the petition is it alleged, nor in the affidavits annexed is it shown, that the defendant is a person of unsound mind for whom a guardian should be appointed.
In Bunting v. Bunting,
Infants, idiots and lunatics are as incapable to defend a suit alone as they are to prosecute one alone; and although named in a bill as parties defendant they conduct their actual defense through a guardian, usually a guardian ad litem appointed by the court on the application of a friend or of the opposite party, although occasionally by the general guardian, conservator or committee without his special appointment as guardian adlitem, at least where his interest is not adverse to his ward's.1 Whiteh. Eq. Pr. 67 § 48.
Lunatics, not so found by inquisition, and persons of weak intellect, or who are by age or infirmity reduced to a second infancy, must defend by guardian. Dan. Ch. Pl. Pr. *176. Where the infirmity is the result of bad health the practice is to allow time to file the answer and not to assign a guardian.Ibid. *178. A person of weak or unsound mind, not so found by inquisition, answers by his guardian, who is appointed in the same manner as the guardian ad litem of an infant defendant.Ibid. *754. In our state, however, under chancery rule 194, for the purpose of having a guardian appointed for an infant to answer and defend the suit, a petition may be presented by the infant, if above the age of fourteen years, and if under that age, by his father, mother or some other friend in his behalf, praying such appointment. And so by analogy in the case of a lunatic, his father, mother or next friend may apply on his behalf.
In this court it has been held that to warrant the appointment of a guardian, the finding on inquisition must be that the subject thereof is of unsound mind, so that he is unfit for thegovernment of himself, his lands and tenements. *5
See Conover's Case,
The principle to be deduced from these cases is that a guardian cannot be appointed for the person or estate of one unless his unsoundness of mind renders him unfit for the government of himself and his property; and this applies as well to the appointment of a guardian ad litem to defend a given cause as it does to the appointment of a general guardian on inquisition and office found. There is no suggestion in this case that the defendant is unfit for the government of himself and his property — only that by reason of illness he believes he is unable to give proper attention and care to the preparation of his defense. In this state there are no degrees of insanity, a man is either sane or insane, and there is no borderland or twilight zone between these two extremes in which a person may be incapacitated by a court order and a guardian appointed for him. The court cannot incapacitate a party, and it may appoint a guardian for him only in case he is himself incapacitated, that is, mentally so unsound as to be unfit for the government of himself and his estate.
The application of the defendant in this case for the appointment of a guardian ad litem for himself must be denied. *6