Crofwell v. Goldstein

230 A.2d 854, 102 R.I. 356, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 696
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 15, 1967
DocketEx. No. 10754
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 230 A.2d 854 (Crofwell v. Goldstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crofwell v. Goldstein, 230 A.2d 854, 102 R.I. 356, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 696 (R.I. 1967).

Opinion

Joslin, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the probate court of the city of Cranston appointing Harry Goldstein, a member of the bar of this state, guardian of the person and estate of Agnes K. Crofwell. The case was twice heard in the superior court on preliminary matters and each time before a different justice. At the earlier hearing it considered, but did not decide, Goldstein’s motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that it had not been taken by an aggrieved person; at the later it in substance denied the mo *357 tion to dismiss, quashed and dismissed the probate court decree, and declared null and void the letters of guardianship which had issued to Goldstein. The case is now here on Goldstein’s exceptions to the refusal to dismiss the probate appeal, to the order.of quashal and dismissal, and to various rulings, evidentiary and otherwise, taken during the proceedings in the superior court.

The dispute concerns who shall be guardian of the person and estate of Agnes K. Crofwell, a longtime resident and domiciliary of the city of Providence who, on March 26, 1958, at the age of 72, was committed to the state hospital for mental diseases upon the certification of two practicing physicians that she was mentally ill and in need of long-term hospitalization. She has at all material times been confined at that institution which is located in the city of Cranston. The parties agree that she is of unsound mind and in need of a guardian to manage her person and estate. They disagree only on who should hold that office.

James B. Crofwell, Agnes’ nephew, initiated this litigation on February 3, 1964, when he petitioned the Cranston probate court to appoint a guardian of the person and estate of his aunt. He alleges in his petition that his aunt was a resident of and had a legal settlement in Cranston, that, she was of unsound mind, and that she lacked discretion to manage her estate. Conformably to- G. L. 1956, §33-15-9, service of process was made upon Agnes and a guardian ad litem was appointed to represent her interests.

At this stage of the proceedings, Arthur L. Conaty, also a member of-the bar of this state, entered the case. He had represented Agnes prior to her 1958 commitment, but he had not seen her subsequent to her becoming a patient at the state hospital. Although lacking specific authorization, he petitioned the probate court to dismiss the pending guardianship proceedings. His petition, purporting to be brought on behalf of Agnes and signed by him as her at *358 torney, urged that the probate court of Cranston lacked jurisdiction because she was a resident and domiciliary of Providence, rather than of Cranston. 1 On March 10, 1964, that petition was denied and on the same day the Cranston court appointed Goldstein guardian of Agnes’ person and estate. From that decree, Conaty, signing both the claim and the reasons of appeal “Agnes K. Crofwell, by her Attorney, Arthur L. Conaty,” appealed to the superior court.

On February 24, 1964, three weeks following the commencement of proceedings in Cranston but prior to Gold-stein’s appointment, Conaty petitioned the probate court of the city of Providence for his own appointment as Agnes’ guardian. He filed as “Arthur L. Conaty, next friend of Agnes K. Crofwell and Trustee under the will of Mary J. Crofwell for the use and benefit of said Agnes K. Crofwell.” Notwithstanding Goldstein’s intervening appointment and qualification as guardian under a decree of the court in Cranston, the Providence court on March 24, 1964, granted the petition. Named as guardian, rather than Conaty, was F. Thomas O’Halloran, also a member of the bar. Both Goldstein and Conaty appealed, but that case has not yet been heard in the superior court; and those appeals, except perhaps peripherally, are not before us at this time.

At the initial hearing in the superior court the question was Goldstein’s motion to dismiss the Conaty appeal. He argued that Agnes could not properly appear “through an attorney who purports to act for her.” The trial justice agreed. In a bench decision he found that Conaty was not an aggrieved person within the contemplation of §33- *359 23-1 and that he lacked the standing which that statute fixed as a precondition for the prosecution of an appeal from a decree of a probate court. However, even though he considered Conaty’s appeal "to be no appeal at all,” he did not dismiss it. Instead, he deferred decision on Gold-stein’s motion to dismiss and, in an attempt to avoid the confusion which he foresaw as the result of two separate courts of probate appointing different guardians for the same person and estate, he invoked § 33-23-17 2 and directed that O’Halloran, in his capacity as guardian, be added as a party appellant. At the same time he suggested, again under authority of §33-23-17, that the appeal from the Cranston decree appointing Goldstein and the two appeals from the Providence decree appointing O’Halloran be consolidated for hearing. Although no order or decree embodying these findings and directions ivas entered, the jacket entry made following the hearing reads: “1964 June 25 — Weisberger, J. — appellee’s motion to dismiss is held until F. Thomas O’Halloran who is ordered to become a party of this action is summoned into this court. Exceptions of both parties are noted.” O’Halloran, pursuant to that directive, was in due course added as a party, but for reasons which the record does not disclose, the trial justice’s suggestion that the three appeals be consolidated for hearing was not followed.

Thereafter, a different justice of the superior court heard the parties on the separate but substantially identical motions of O’Halloran and Conaty to quash and dismiss the Cranston petition and the decree entered thereon appointing Goldstein guardian. He found that Agnes was a dom *360 iciliary of Providence rather than of Cranston, and equating her domicile with the residence and legal settlement requirement established by §33-15-3 as a jurisdictiona] prerequisite in guardianship proceedings, he concluded that the probate court of Cranston had exceeded its authority by entertaining and acting upon the petition for the appointment of a guardian for Agnes.

Based upon those findings he ordered that the Cranston proceedings be quashed and dismissed and that the Gold-stein appointment be vacated. Giving scant heed in his bench decision to Conaty’s status as an appellant, he found in substance that his appeal * * inured to the benefit of the ward and that her subsequent guardian could take advantage of these particular proceedings.”

Although a number of exceptions have been briefed and argued, those principally relied upon relate first to the ruling vacating the Goldstein appointment, and secondly to the issue of whether or not Conaty was entitled to prosecute an appeal. The latter is dispositive. Unless Conaty is qualified as an appellant, his purported appeal, as the trial justice said, was “no appeal at all.” Who may claim an appeal from a probate decree or order is controlled by §33-23-1. It permits any person aggrieved to appeal to the superior court by filing a claim of appeal within 40 and reasons of appeal within 50 days after the entry of the order or decree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 A.2d 854, 102 R.I. 356, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crofwell-v-goldstein-ri-1967.