Guardianship of Gordon

132 P.2d 824, 56 Cal. App. 2d 523, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 213
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 5, 1943
DocketCiv. 6845
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 132 P.2d 824 (Guardianship of Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guardianship of Gordon, 132 P.2d 824, 56 Cal. App. 2d 523, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 213 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

ADAMS, P. J.

This is an appeal from an order denying the petition of James E. Gordon for restoration to competency.

Petitioner, on December 23, 1935, after many years of drinking to excess, was committed to the Napa State Hospital, suffering from delirium tremens. At the time of his commitment he owned a rooming house in Napa, which he operated, and where he lived. On January 13, 1936, his son, James E. Gordon, Jr., was appointed guardian of his person and estate. On June 22, 1936, petitioner was discharged from the state hospital upon the ground that he had recovered. He was thereupon permitted by his guardian to return to the rooming house and resume the management and control thereof, and subsequently the son resigned as guardian. Later the Bank of America was appointed guardian, hut it also resigned, and about a year prior to the institution of the present proceeding Theodore J. Treadway, coroner and public administrator, was appointed guardian. In April, 1941, said guardian took Gordon to the Napa County Infirmary, where he has since resided. His petition for restoration to competency was filed December 2, 1941.

At the hearing thereon, Dr. Charlesworth, Superintendent of the Napa State Hospital, was called as a witness for petitioner. He testified that he had not seen Gordon since his discharge from the hospital in 1936, until the morning of the hearing, when he had a short talk with him; that in his opinion Gordon was as competent as any man of his age, and that he thought he was “able to handle himself and take care of his affairs.” On cross-examination a hypothetical question was asked him, as follows:

“Q. . . . Assume that this man had drunk to excess over many years, had suffered delirium tremens and had been committed to the Napa State Hospital and kept there from *525 December 23rd, 1935, to June 22nd, 1936, before he was discharged, and assuming that after his discharge he went to his place of residence, which is a rooming house capable of maintaining 40 or 50 roomers and again became addicted to the use of alcoholic beverages until the rooming house became in such a state of undescribable filth until April of 1941, when he was removed to the County Hospital and was there ever since his recovery,—in your opinion do you think that he would be competent to return to his rooming house, which is the property of his estate, where there would be easy access to alcoholic beverages and run the rooming house; further assuming that the rooming house brings in rentals in excess of $500.00 per month?”

His reply was as follows: “Under such a condition, I would say no, he is not competent but it would not be based upon the fact that he was committed to the Napa State Hospital for delirium tremens and that continued. It would be based on the fact he was a chronic drunkard and was drunk all the time and neglected his business because he was drunk and not because of his mentality.”

He was then asked: “And does a man of 72 years who has drunk in the manner I have described and you have described, suddenly stop the use of drinking ordinarily where it is easily available to him?” And his answer was “no.”

Gordon, testifying in his own behalf, stated that he had quit drinking; that he had not had anything to drink since he had been in the infirmary, though he had had a little money in his possession, and a saloon was only a block away.

Called as a witness for the guardian, petitioner’s daughter, testifying as to his condition prior to his commitment to the state hospital, said that at that time he was in a terrible condition; that he had not had a bath for years, and his mental condition was bad, and the house was terrible; that he drank more or less constantly until he was committed to the state hospital; that she used to go up there every few months and clean out the place, and throw out all the bottles; that after his release from the hospital he stayed off of liquor for about a month, then started in on a little beer, and at the end of six months he was drinking; that he kept on getting worse and worse, and that he would take drinks of a half a glass at a time; that he was eating mildewed food and dog food; that she had seen raisins and rice with a coat of mildew on it; that he had not been taking care of him *526 self, and that she had gone up there and seen him when he was almost nude; that he was 76 years of age (though he claimed to he but 73); that within a year after his release from the hospital he - started in being dirty, and that later they could not even get near him; that his legs were bothering him, and he could not walk upstairs; that he did not bathe himself, and toward the end, did not bother even to go to the bathroom; that the condition of the house was filthy, and one could not endure the smell around his apartment; that he was renting rooms to three or four people, and she tried to clean up the house, but that when it got dirty again, he could not carry on; that the pipe underneath the sink was leaking, and water was all over the floor, and dishes were piled in it; that she did not believe that he was competent to take care of himself and his property, and that she did not think he would refrain from the use of alcohol; that he had’ scarcely been sober since 1910, except for the time when he first came out of the hospital; that knowing her father as she did, she did not believe he would refrain from drinking to excess.

James E. Gordon, Jr. testified that before his father was committed in December, 1935, he would say that he lived on whiskey except when he got so sick that he would buy a gallon of buttermilk, and that outside of that, he did not think he did anything but drink; that he could not take care of himself and his property; that after his release from the hospital he did not drink for a while, but after about a year he was drinking as heavily as in 1935; that in 1936 his father had asked to be restored to competency, promising that he would not touch liquor again; that thereupon, witness resigned as guardian, and his father was allowed to go back and handle his own money, with the court’s permission, though the guardianship was still maintained of record; that before his father was sent to the county infirmary he was drinking all the time; that he saw him about three months before he went to the hospital, and that at that time he sat inside a screen door with just an overcoat over him and without any underclothes on; that he was suffering with his feet because of neglect of them; that in his opinion his father was not competent and capable, unassisted, of taking care of himself and his property; that he would revert to his old habits, and without doubt would go right back to drinking; that under the guardianship of Mr. Treadway his *527 father’s property was in first-class condition for a building of that sort.

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 P.2d 824, 56 Cal. App. 2d 523, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardianship-of-gordon-calctapp-1943.