In re Clark

31 Misc. 339, 64 N.Y.S. 984
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedApril 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Misc. 339 (In re Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Clark, 31 Misc. 339, 64 N.Y.S. 984 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Knapp, J.

The petition of Howland P. Wells, a brother-in-law of the alleged incompetent, accompanied by an affidavit of Collins Payne and Mary E. Payne, was presented to this court July 24, 1899, and”an order granted thereon, appointing a commissioner, as provided by section 2327 of the Code. The usual proceedings under sections 2330 and 2331 of the Code have been had, and the inquisition is now returned, which is duly signed by the commisr sioner and jurors, finding that said Eugene P. Clark is an incompetent person, and this motion is made for its confirmation and for the appointment of á committee.

Mr. Clark, the alleged incompetent, by his counsel, objects to the confirmation and moves that the petition be dismissed; or, that the inquisition be set aside and a new trial or hearing be granted. Improper conduct on the part of the jury or some member of it, in conversing with a witness, and a claim that the officer in charge of the jury was in the jury-room during their deliberations are made one of the grounds of objection to confirmation. It appears that the officer, during a part of the time while the jury were deliberating, was inside of the room occupied by the jury, but stood near the entrance door and took no part in the deliberation and heard hut little, if anything, of what the jury was discussing; the room is a very large one, called a hall,” being fifty feet or more in length, and the jury were congregated in one comer, near [341]*341the stove, and the officer merely stepped inside the door on account of the inclemency of the weather. While the presence of officers in a jury-room during the deliberations of a jury should not be permitted, still the circumstances of this case are such that the irregularity complained of could in no way have affected the result or prejudiced the rights of any parties, and confirmation of the inquisition would not be refused on that ground. As to the alleged improper conduct of the jury, this is brought to the notice of the court by merely a hearsay affidavit, the person who claimed to have overheard the conversation having refused to make an affidavit in reference thereto; the charge is too indefinite and uncertain to constitute any ground for reversal.

More serious questions, however, present themselves upon this motion. Before any evidence was taken in the proceeding before the commissioner and jury, the respondent appeared specially by counsel and moved to dismiss the proceedings upon the ground that the affidavit and petition read on motion for the order directing the commission to issue, are insufficient in law and in fact to warrant the granting of such order. The motion was denied and an exception was taken, and the motion is now renewed before the court. Ho notice of the presentation of the petition to the court was served upon the alleged incompetent person; while such notice is not required by the Code and is unnecessary (Matter of Beach, 23 App. Div. 413), still the fact that the alleged incompetent person did not have notice will, it seems to me, entitle him to raise any question that he may be advised as to the sufficiency of the petition and corroborating affidavit, upon the first opportunity he may have to present the same. I think that the commissioner was right in refusing to entertain the motion, that being a matter which must be addressed to the court and over which the commissioner has no jurisdiction. An order to show cause, with a stay, might have been asked of the court, or a motion might have been made to the court before the execution of the commission, for a dismissal of the petition, upon the ground of insufficiency, but such order was not sought, nor was such motion made until after the hearing and the return of the inquisition. I see no just grounds for refusing to entertain the motion at this time. Counsel for petitioner cites the case of Zimmer, 15 Hun, 214, in support of his contention that the sufficiency of the allegations of the petition cannot be questioned at this time. The syllabus in this case is misleading. [342]*342The committee of Zimmer had been appointed in 1867, and a motion was made to supersede the committee and was not made until nearly ten years after. All that the court decided, so far as the question here raised is concerned, is found at page 216 of the opinion: “The averments in the petition and affidavits respecting the mental condition of Zimmer were not sufficient to authorize the appointment of a committee; and if the inquisition had found nothing more, it would" have been quashed on motion. But the' inquisition found that Zimmer was of unsound mind, and incapable of the government of himself or the management of his estate. That finding brought the case within the statute, and authorized the court to appoint a committee. The appointment, thus made upon a sufficient finding of the jury, cannot be set aside at this late day and in this proceeding, by reason of the. alleged insufficiency or irregularity of the petition, and affidavits.” This case comes very far short of deciding that a respondent cannot, upon the first opportunity to be heard by the court, move to dismiss the petition upon the ground of its insufficiency. In the case of Beach, 23 App. Div. 411, notice of the presentation of the petition was given to the alleged incompetent, and affidavits were read upon both sides, and although the petition and corroborating affidavits were sufficient to show that the case was one of those specified in section 2320 of the Code, still, because of contradictory affidavits, the court refused to order a commission to issue; and it is held, in substance, that the petition should not have been dismissed, but the question of Mrs. Beach’s competency should be investigated before the proper tribunal. I find nothing in the opinion of the case of Jackson v. Jackson, 37 Hun, 306, holding a different proposition. If, then, the sufficiency of the petition and the corroborating affidavit of Collins and Mary E. Payne must be considered at this time, our next inquiry must be directed to the petition and this affidavit to determine whether or not there is enough stated therein, from which it can be said that it presumptively appears that the case is one of those specified in section 2320 of the Code; and this requires a careful examination of the provisions of the Code relating to these proceedings and of the precedents established by the courts in construing them.

By section 2320, it is provided that the “ jurisdiction of the supreme court extends to the custody of the person, and the care of the property, of a person incompetent to manage himself or his [343]*343affairs, in consequence of lunacy, idiocy, habitual drunkenness, or imbecility arising from old age or loss of memory and understanding, or other cause.” It is.unnecessary to state that the' County Court has precisely the same jurisdiction, and whatever controls the action of the Supreme Court in these matters to the same extent controls the County Court. By the same section, it is also provided that a person against whom a proceeding is brought shall be designated “ an alleged incompetent person; ” and “ after the appointment of a committee of such person, in all subsequent proceedings the lunatic, idiot, habitual drunkard, or imbecile shall be designated an incompetent person.’ ” It will be thus seen that there are four classes of persons, and but four, over which the court can exercise jurisdiction by means of a committee; these four classes are (1) lunatics, (2) idiots, (3) habitual drunkards, and .(4) imbeciles; the imbecility may arise from old age or loss of memory and understanding, or from other cause.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Misc. 339, 64 N.Y.S. 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-clark-nycountyct-1900.