First Nat. Bank of Portland v. Wall

88 P.2d 311, 161 Or. 152, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 42
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 P.2d 311 (First Nat. Bank of Portland v. Wall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Portland v. Wall, 88 P.2d 311, 161 Or. 152, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 42 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

BELT, J.

On July 8, 1937, the defendant, Blanche M. Wall, filed a complaint against her husband, Charles M. Wall, charging that he was an insane person and dangerous to be at large. On the following day Wall was arrested and taken into custody. After an alleged hearing, he was committed by the Honorable George Tazwell, judge of the probate department of the circuit court for Multnomah county, to the state hospital at Salem, Oregon, as an insane person. On November 9, 1937, the superintendent of the state hospital released Wall on parole to Robert A. Bennett, counsel for plaintiff herein. After Wall was committed as an insane person, the defendant filed a petition to be appointed as guardian of her husband’s estate. The court, "on August 6, 1937, refused to appoint her but appointed the United States National Bank of Portland to act in that capacity. Wall, on November 17, 1937, filed his petition with the court alleging in substance that he *154 was a sane person capable of handling his own property and that the letters of guardianship theretofore issued should be revoked. The bank answered, denying any knowledge of Wall’s mental condition, and asked that a hearing be held to determine petitioner’s sanity and that if it were found and adjudged that he was a sane man capable of conducting his own affairs, its guardianship be terminated.

While the above proceedings relative to revocation of letters of guardianship were pending, Charles M. Wall, on February 1,1938, filed the instant independent suit in the circuit court for Multnomah county against his wife, praying in his complaint: (1) That the order committing him to the state hospital as an insane person be set aside and declared to be void; (2) that all records of the proceedings in the court pertaining to the purported adjudication of insanity and the commitment of the plaintiff be expunged; and (3) that the statute (§ 67-1606, Oregon Code 1930) under which plaintiff was adjudged insane and committed be declared unconstitutional.

The plaintiff, in his complaint, alleges in substance that the defendant, in filing the complaint charging him with being an insane person, was actuated by malice and hatred and had no probable cause for so doing; that he was arrested on such charge and incarcerated in the county jail where he was not permitted to communicate with his friends or obtain the benefit of counsel in the “pretended lunacy inquisition”; that he was never taken before the court for any hearing on the charge of insanity or permitted to defend against the same; that the physicians appointed by the court failed to make any “adequate and bona fide examination” of him as to his sanity, but that the certificates of insanity filed were “based on false and fraudulent accusations *155 made against plaintiff by other persons * * * and on an interview had by Eobert P. Smith (examining physician) with the plaintiff on or about January 8, 1935”; that the findings of insanity made by the court were false and “without any foundation whatsoever” and the testimony upon which the same were based was false and given “solely for the purpose of fraudulently obtaining an order of the court committing plaintiff to the asylum for the insane, and to deprive plaintiff of his legal rights and the control of his property”; and that the order of commitment — a copy of which is attached to the complaint — has never been “annulled, vacated, or cancelled by order of any court.”

It is further alleged in the complaint that the statute (§ 67-1606, Oregon Code 1930) under which the insanity inquisition was instituted, contravenes the federal and state constitutions in that “it fails to require notice of citation to be issued to plaintiff when accused of being insane and ordered produced for a trial on said issue; denies the right of trial by jury to plaintiff on an issue of his sanity, and wholly fails to provide plaintiff an opportunity to be heard in defense of such charge of insanity; and purports to authorize judges of the County Courts of the State of Oregon to commit alleged insane persons to an asylum without informing or advising them of the nature of the charge or proceedings, and without giving such persons an opportunity to defend a charge of insanity, and thereby deprive such persons, and particularly this plaintiff, of liberty and property without due process of law.”

Defendant demurred to the complaint on the grounds:

“First: That the court has no jurisdiction of the subject of this suit;
*156 “Second: That the plaintiff has no legal capacity to sne;
“Third: That there is another action pending between the same parties, for the same cause;
“Fourth: That there is a defect of parties defendant, and
“Fifth: That the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of suit against the defendant, Blanche M. Wall.”

Upon demurrer being overruled, the defendant answered, denying the material allegations of the complaint to which attention has been directed, and alleged as an affirmative defense the pendency in the probate department of the circuit court of the proceedings instituted by plaintiff to have letters of guardianship revoked.

The plaintiff, in his reply, admits the pendency of the guardianship proceedings.

It would fill many pages of the reports to set forth the pleadings in haec verba but it is believed the above summary of the same will suffice.

Thereafter, on July 14, 1938, the cause came on for hearing in the circuit court without the intervention of a jury. Upon conclusion of the trial, on July 20, 1938, the court made an oral announcement from the bench that no fraud had been shown, but took the case under advisement relative to certain of its phases and required the submission of briefs thereon.

The plaintiff died on July 20, 1938. On July 25, 1938, the court, over the objection of the defendant, substituted “The First National Bank of Portland, executor of the last will and testament of Charles M. Wall, deceased,” as a party plaintiff. In the motion to substitute the executor as plaintiff, it is recited that on *157 August 10, 1938, the defendant filed a petition in the probate department of the circuit court to revoke the will of decedent on the ground that he had no mental capacity to execute the same. It is averred in the petition for revocation that the will was executed on May 5,1938; that Wall was adjudged insane and committed to the state hospital on July 9, 1937, and that he had never been discharged therefrom.

On September 8, 1938, the court, after again hearing oral argument, entered a decree as of July 20,1938, dismissing the suit without costs to either party. Plaintiff appeals.

The voluminous record in this case, including a transcript of evidence having 462 pages — to say nothing of “overfull” pleadings — might well have been avoided had the court sustained the demurrer to the complaint.

Plaintiff had his remedy in an appeal from the order of commitment, but he certainly had no cause of suit against the defendant.

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Related

State v. Collman
497 P.2d 1233 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P.2d 311, 161 Or. 152, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-portland-v-wall-or-1939.