In Re Bryant

38 So. 2d 245, 214 La. 573, 1948 La. LEXIS 1000
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 13, 1948
DocketNo. 38642.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 245 (In Re Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bryant, 38 So. 2d 245, 214 La. 573, 1948 La. LEXIS 1000 (La. 1948).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

The relief sought in this action by plaintiff, Rufus C. Bryant, is the annulment of a judgment rendered on December 17, 1945, by the Civil District Court of Orleans Parish, committing him and 15 others, as indigent insanes and incapable of taking care ■of their persons, to the East Louisiana State Hospital at Jackson.

With respect to this plaintiff, an application to commit him was filed on December 11, 1945, by R. A. Johnson who acted for and on behalf of Dr. C. Grenes Cole, Coroner for the Parish of Orleans. On the following day the court commanded, in a warrant attached to the application, that he appear on December 20, 1945, at 10:30 o’clock a. m., “to show cause why you should not be adjudged an indigent insane, and committed as such to one of the State Hospitals for the Insane of the State of Louisiana, as provided by Act No. 303 of 1944.” Further, it ordered him “to inform ■this court within five days from the service hereof the name and address of your physician, if you have any, as well as the names and addresses of any witnesses that you may desire to have summoned on your behalf.” Also, the court commanded the civil sheriff, or any other peace officer for the Parish of Orleans, to take Bryant into custody and confifie him in the City Mental Hospital until December 20, 1945, and on that date to produce him before the court so that he might be dealt with according to law.

Accompanying the application, as required by Sections 12 and 13 of Act No. 303 of 1944, was a certificate signed by the Coroner, Dr. C. Grenes Cole, and by Dr. Edmund Connely. This certificate, among other things, stated:

“Pt. thinks that everybody is against him. Thinks that the neighbors are watching him and talking about him. Imagines that his wife and the doctors are working against him and trying to do him harm. *577 He talks to voices and voices talk to him. Says his father is not dead, because he comes to see him. He also talks to his dead brother. Says his wife wants to get rid of him so she can get someone else. Wanted his wife’s salary and says it is his and she should give him the money to spend; attempted to choke her when 'he could not get it.”

Further, therein each of those physicians certified:

“I hereby certify that the patient mentioned in the application is not related to me by blood or marriage and that I am not connected with the hospital in other than a professional capacity and I further certify that for the reasons furnished in said application that the patient is in need of mental observation and hospital' care.”

And on the back of the certificate was the following-

“Date Nov. 30, 1945.

;‘I hereby agree to transfer of Rufus C. Bryant to Jackson if the doctors advise and the Courts commit.

“(Signature) Frankie Bryant “wife.”

According to the written return of a deputy sheriff of Orleans Parish, there was served on Rufus C. Bryant on December 14, 1945, a copy of the mentioned application and attached orders, one of the latter of which commanded him to appear before the court on December 20, 1945.

Instead of hearing the charges of insanity on the scheduled date of December 20, 1945, however, the count on December 17, 1945, or three days earlier, considered them and rendered a judgment reading in part:

“ * * * Court convened this day at the City Hospital for Mental Diseases.

“Present: Hon. Harold A. Moise,

“Judge of Division ‘C’,

“Parish of Orleans;

“and Drs. Edmund Connely and C. Grenes Cole having certified that the defendants are insane and should be committed in accordance with the Statute, having been sworn and having deposed to the same effect, and the Judge, after seeing and conversing with the defendants, being of the same opinion:

“It Is Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that the said defendants, * * * Rufus C. Bryant, * * * be adjudged indigent insanes and incapable of taking care of their persons and that they be committed to the East Louisiana State Hospital at Jackson, La., in accordance with law.”

.Pursuant to this judgment of commitment, and under a warrant issued by the court on the same date, Bryant was delivered to and received by the Superintendent of the East Louisiana State Hospital on December 20, 1945.

A short time thereafter, perhaps in January, 1946 (this date is not definitely shown by the record), the patient was discharged by such Hospital as being “without psychosis,” meaning not insane.

Bryant instituted the instant action against R. A. Johnson on February 26, 1946, *579 praying that the judgment of commitment rendered on December 20, 1945, be decreed null and void ab initio and be set aside. For a cause of action, as is disclosed by his original and supplemental petitions, he alleged only that:

“Said judgment should be decreed null and void ab initio and set aside, because of the ill practices in the proceedings leading to the rendition and signing of said judg-’ ment, which, together with said judgment, were and are a fraud upon petitioner and deprive him of his rights and his liberty without due process of law, in contravention of Section 2 of Article I of the Constitution of Louisiana and Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.”

The defendant filed several exceptions and an answer.

Ultimately, after a trial of the merits, the district court rendered judgment dismissing the suit at plaintiff’s costs.

On an appeal to the Court of Appeal, Orleans Circuit, that judgment was affirmed. 30 So.2d 233.

The cause is now before us for consideration by virtue of a writ of certiorari issued, on plaintiff’s application, to the Court of Appeal.

As we appreciate his pleadings, the argument of his counsel here (both oral and in brief), and certain admissions made during the trial, plaintiff does not contend (and he did not allege) that he was not mentally ill when the judgment of commitment was rendered on December 17, 1945. His sole complaint appears to be that he was denied the opportunity of.being heard in the insanity proceeding, the commitment having been adjudged three days before the date (December 20, 1945) scheduled and fixed in the court’s order (a copy of which was served on plaintiff) for the hearing. Thus, in his petition as before shown, he alleged that the judgment should be decreed null “ * * * because of the ill practices in the proceedings leading to the rendition and signing of said judgment * * Again, in the brief of his counsel it is said:

“ * * * The essential fact here is, that, as appears on the face of the record itself and as admitted by counsel for defendant and by both the district judge and the Court of Appeal, the judgment was rendered against Bryant, without notice and without an opportunity to be heard.”

And during the trial the following colloquy between counsel occurred:

“Mr Lancaster: (Counsel for defendant)

“Will you admit, Mr. Furlow, for the sake of argument only, that if he had been heard on the 20th he would have been committed ?

“Mr. Furlow: (Counsel for plaintiff)

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Related

In re Deville
610 So. 2d 1070 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1992)
State v. Commitment (Jackson)
289 So. 2d 565 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Phillips v. Giles
252 So. 2d 624 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1971)
In re Certification of Coates
173 N.E.2d 797 (New York Court of Appeals, 1961)
State ex rel. Ingram v. Robard
82 So. 2d 788 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1955)
O'Rourke v. O'Rourke
69 So. 2d 567 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 245, 214 La. 573, 1948 La. LEXIS 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bryant-la-1948.