Compton v. Compton

606 S.W.2d 436, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2905
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 16, 1980
DocketNo. 42023
StatusPublished

This text of 606 S.W.2d 436 (Compton v. Compton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compton v. Compton, 606 S.W.2d 436, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2905 (Mo. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

LACKLAND H. BLOOM, Special Judge.

On April 18, 1979, respondent, Ronald Compton, filed a petition pursuant to Chapter 475 Revised Statutes Missouri, 19781 alleging that appellant, Norman Compton, was incapable of managing his property or caring for himself by reason of habitual drunkenness and seeking the appointment of a guardian of the person and estate of appellant. A trial was held without a jury on May 3, 1979, and on May 7, 1979, the court entered judgment finding appellant incompetent by reason of habitual drunkenness and appointing respondent guardian of his person. The court found that appellant neither owned nor possessed property and accordingly did not appoint a guardian of the estate.

Although appellant sets out three separate points of alleged error, the essence of his appeal is that there was not a sufficent factual foundation for the court to permit the lay witnesses and the medical expert to express opinions as to his ability to care for himself or to support the court’s finding and judgment that he is incompetent and lacks the ability to care for himself. We affirm the judgment.

At the threshold of this appeal, respondent urges us to dismiss the appeal for the reason that appellant failed to preserve in his motion for new trial the specific points of error now raised. We decline to dismiss the appeal under authority of Supreme Court Rule 73.01(2)(b), which provides in cases tried without a jury neither a motion for new trial nor a motion to amend the judgment is necessary to preserve any matter for appellate review. We review the case on both the law and the evidence as in suits of an equitable nature, disregard evidence deemed not admissible and enter such judgment as is deemed proper giving due consideration to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses. Rule 73.01(3), Mo.R.Civ.P.

At the time of trial, appellant was fifty-five years of age. He was divorced in 1959 and since then has lived in various states. He has seven adult children who live in Tennessee. In November, 1977, he returned to his mother’s home in Leadwood, Missouri after an absence of six years, where he resided until the incidents giving rise to the present proceedings occurred.

Appellant’s seventy-nine year old mother, Bertha Compton, testified that on April 6, 1979, he had been drinking. She was watching television when he ran in and cornered her and said he “was going to kill me. ... He was going to bust my head wide open.” Mrs. Compton stated that he threatened to kill her fifteen times that night. He told her he wanted her dead so he could get her property and told her: “If I told any of my children about this that he was going to sexually abuse me and if I told about this he was going to kill me.”

He went in the kitchen about 2:00 a. m. and began throwing knives at the wall and holding a conversation with himself and going into a laughing spell. He hollered, laughed and kicked soda bottles all over the kitchen. He hollered at his mother, cussed her and told her he would kill her if she came in the kitchen. He said he was going to kill all her kids and kill Jesus.

The mother left the next morning and had her neighbor call her son, Ronald, respondent herein, whom she then went to live with in St. Louis. She next saw appellant on April 8 at the State Hospital at Farmington. At that time he was drunk, [438]*438called her and Ronald bad names and said he was going to kill them and the lady doctor. He told her: “I’m drinking and I’m going to and there’s nothing you can do to stop me. And I’ll kill you if you say your [sic] going to stop me.”

The mother also testified that about six years earlier he had come to live with her and his father. “He came off of a big drunk and we let him stay.” But later “we had to ask him to leave”. When he came to live with her in 1977, she told him he could not bring liquor in the house nor “come in on me a drinking. He agreed but didn’t keep his agreement.” He became abusive on occasions before April 6, and she would leave the room until he settled down.

On the morning of April 7, after his mother left, appellant entered the house by breaking the door. She had it fixed and he again broke in by pushing out a window. While he lived with her, appellant was not employed and had no income. His only possession when he came was a “hair spray can.” Sometimes he did odd jobs around the house, mowing the lawn, fixing the barn or fixing the graves at the cemetery. She could not converse with him because he was incoherent and said things which did not make sense to her. She said she was afraid of him and would not live with him anymore. Over objection, she stated her opinion that her son was unable to take care of himself. On cross-examination she said he could feed himself and “Maybe he could handle his affairs. ... I’d like to see him try ... but I don’t think he can.”

Respondent Ronald Compton saw appellant about once a month when he visited his mother. When he went there his brother would talk to himself, laugh and carry on what his brother called “enterleetual communication.” Appellant would not try to hold normal conversation with him. Appellant admitted to him that he was drinking and that there was nothing wrong with it. The only threat made against respondent was on April 8 when they signed appellant in at the hospital. He said he would kill him and that “he would grind my glasses into my eyes”. He had alcohol on his breath at the time. Respondent testified that his brother was not employed and had no money or property. Over objection, he stated that based on what he observed and what his brother told him, he did not think appellant could take care of himself at the present time because of his drinking. He was aware that appellant had been in and out of jails for drunkenness in Kirksville, West Plains and Owensville.

Dr. Javier Pichardo, Chief of Medical Staff at the state hospital in Farmington, testified that he examined appellant on April 12, 1979. The reason for the examination was that appellant did not want to stay or receive treatment. When taken to the hospital on April 9, appellant was intoxicated. On April 12, when examined, he was completely sober. Dr. Pichardo’s testimony was that appellant denied having a drinking problem: “All people had problems but not him.... He denies illness, he denies everything he does when drinking. He has blackouts and he doesn’t remember what he does.” Dr. Pichardo further testified, without objection, that his diagnosis was that appellant had been an alcoholic with possibly manic-depressive personality for a long time. This last time “I have found also a log of paranoid features in his behavior and what he said.... He has a chronic alcoholic disease”.

He was admitted to the state hospital in 1956 and diagnosed as an alcoholic. He was brought in several times after that, once in 1959, and twice each in 1972 and 1973. The night before the trial, appellant was brought in by the police after he was discovered staggering on the highway. On prior admissions, he was brought in because of threatening behavior to his wife or boys, all during drunken episodes.

Dr. Pichardo testified that appellant was in need of treatment. “I don’t believe he is competent to say he needs treatment or not. It [alcoholism] interferes with his ability to take care of himself.”

Respondent’s Exhibit 3, introduced without objection and being part of the records of the state hospital at Farmington, showed that appellant had been admitted there [439]

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State v. Brown
227 S.W.2d 646 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1950)
Murphy v. Carron
536 S.W.2d 30 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1976)
In Re Delany
226 S.W.2d 366 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1950)
In Re the Alleged Incompetency of Armstrong
573 S.W.2d 141 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1978)
Dowling v. Luisetti
173 S.W.2d 381 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
606 S.W.2d 436, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compton-v-compton-moctapp-1980.