Coleman v. Commissioners of the Lunatic Asylum

45 Ky. 239, 6 B. Mon. 239, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 20, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 Ky. 239 (Coleman v. Commissioners of the Lunatic Asylum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman v. Commissioners of the Lunatic Asylum, 45 Ky. 239, 6 B. Mon. 239, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 108 (Ky. Ct. App. 1845).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This Writ of error is prosecuted for the reversal of a decree of the Fayette Circuit Court, that George Coleman pay to the Commissioners of the Lunatic Asylum, out of the profits of the estate of Henry Coleman, a lunatic, $669 16, for the support and maintenance furnished to the said Henry for about five years, during which he had remained in the Asylum, and been maintianed as a pauper, at the charge of the Commonwealth. '

The proceeding was commenced by a petition in the nature of a bill in chancery, filed in the names of the Commissioners of the Lunatic Asylum, and also of the Commonwealth’s Attorney for the 8th judicial district, as [240]*240relators in behalf of the Commonwealth. Henry Coleman, the lunatic, then in the Asylum in.Fayette county, and George Coleman, his father, residing in Bath county, were made defendants, and the process was served upon each in the county of his residence. It is alledged in the petition, and appears in proof, that at a special term of the Fayette Circuit Court, in August, 1834, Henry Coleman, then in Lexington, was regularly found to be a lunatic, and ordered to the Asylum, the jury not knowing when he became a lunatic, nor whether he had any estate; and the record of the proceedings states that he was visited by the Judge in the jail where he was confined, it being impossible to bring him into Court owing to his violent conduct.

The Circuit Court of any county where a lunatic may be found going at large, and who is ungovernable, has jurisdiction to have an inquest into his state of mind and funds. —And the same Court has jurisdiction to make the proper orders appropriating his estate to his maintenance.

Upon these facts we may here remark, that we do not doubt the jurisdiction of the Fayette Circuit Court to direct an inquest, and upon return thereof, to dispose according to law, of any lunatic found in the county, under circumstances like these, no matter where his proper residence may be. The case of Castleman vs Castleman, (6 Dana, 55.) does indeed decide that under the circumstances there stated, the county in which the alledged lunatic permanently resided,, was the only proper county in which to hold the inquest. But that case does not decide that the Court of no other county would, under any circumstance, be authorized to direct and hold the inquest.

The statute of 1793, (1 Stat. Laws, 793,) gives jurisdiction to any Court of Chancery to which application shall be made by the public attorney, to enquire into the fact of lunacy, appoint a committee, and make other proper orders. While the 4th and 5th sections of the act of 1833, (1 Stat. Laws, 803,) provides for the case of a lunatic who being permitted to go at large is considered, dangerous, and authorizes the Court to order him to the Lunatic Asylum, and if he have estate, to make the necessary orders for appropriating it to his support.

It is manifest from these provisions and from others which need not be specially referred to, that the Court having jurisdiction to hóld the inquest and order the lunatic to the hospital, has jurisdiction also to make the proper orders for appropriating his estate to his maintenance [241]*241while there. And further, that it was not intended that the State should bear the charge of the lu'natic’s support, ... , , r ,. ,, either in or out ol the Asylum, so tar as his own estate might be sufficient.

Where a lunatic ted atestatePPex^nSp'ellb®0n°u0rí bill by attorney for Commonwealth,may de“hr®e mCommon-his estate, against jhis^estate," ^ ofSt]ceep?n¿ such^ in I different h°lwhmh°the^ní p°ocesSsbe" ing served on the couniy where siut 1S broughl"

in this case then, it appears that the jury having been ignorant of any estate of Henry Coleman, and so staling in their inquest, he was received into the Asylum as a person having no estate, and was kept at the charge of ~ , . ,. . , X the Commonwealth lor about rive years, when the Comrnissloners of the Asylum discovering that during all that period he had three valuable negro men slaves, whose hire was worth annually, much more than enough to support him, and that they had been, and were still in the possession of his father, George Coleman, in Bath county, filed this petition praying on the ground of these facts, that George Coleman might be decreed to pay for the past support of said Henry at the Asylum, out of the profits of his estate already received, and that a committee might be appointed and such other orders made as would insure the future application of his estate to his support while he should remain in the Asylum.

It has already been shown that irrespective of the fact that Henry Coleman was served with process in Fayette, and was resident, or at least commorant there when this suit was brought, the Fayette Circuit Court, as having just and properly taken jurisdiction of the lunatic, had authority to make such orders as were proper for the appropriation of his estate to his support. And as the statutes expressly provide that in case of a lunatic kept by a committee, the Court may, in making such orders, not only provide for the future, but also supply past deficiencies, we do not doubt that in this case, upon the discovery of estate not previously known, the Court had authority to provide, not only for the future support of the lunatic at the Asylum, out of that estate, but also to decree a remuneration for the expense incurred in his previous support at that institution. But this expense was defrayed by the Commonwealth and not by the Commissioners who merely disbursed the funds appropriated by the Legislature for the support of pauper lunatics at the Asylum. The Commonwealth, therefore, and not the [242]*242Commissioners, were entitled to be reimbursed; and although the proceeding is novel, and not expressly provided for by statule, yet upon the principles which have been stated as' deducible from the statutes relating to lunatics, and upon the clear equity of the case, we are of opinion that upon the discovery of estate belonging to an individual who had been supported as a pauper at the Asylum, the Commonwealth, upon information and petition by her attorney, and the Commissioners who are her more immediate agents in the premises, is entitled to a decree for reimbursement of past expenses out of the estate, if it can be had without injury to innocent individuals having claims upon it. Regularly perhaps the proceedings should be in the name of the Commonwealth, who is entitled to the decree. But we are inclined (o the opinion that a petition by her attorney in a matter in which she is interested, is virtually her petition and entitles her to the benefit of the proceeding as a party.

The attorney for the Commonwealth is the proper person to apply to the Chancellor for an inquisition of lunacy. One who assumed to act as the committee of a lunatic and who was receiving the profits of his estate, not allowed to retain his property purchased at. a reduced price, but credited by his disbursements.

The regular initiation of the enquiry of lunacy, is by petition and motion of the Commonwealth’s Attorney, asking for the writ de idiota inquirendo. And we do not know’ that (here is any necessily for changing the style of the proceeding at any subsequent stage.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Colligan
104 N.W. 905 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1905)
Sturges v. Longworth
1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 544 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1853)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Ky. 239, 6 B. Mon. 239, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-commissioners-of-the-lunatic-asylum-kyctapp-1845.