In Re Johnson's Estate

281 N.W. 597, 286 Mich. 213
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1938
DocketDocket No. 30, Calendar No. 40,076.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 281 N.W. 597 (In Re Johnson's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Johnson's Estate, 281 N.W. 597, 286 Mich. 213 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

McAllister, J.

This is an appeal by Charles Johnson from an order of the circuit court denying his petition to discharge a guardian previously appointed for him by the probate court on the ground that he was mentally incompetent to have the care, management, control and charge of his property and estate.

On June 14, 1934, by order of the probate court, petitioner was declared to be mentally incompetent and on August 21, 1934, his son, the defendant, was appointed his guardian. On November 6, 1936, petitioner filed in the probate court an application to discharge the guardian which was denied February 26, 1937. Petitioner thereafter appealed to the •circuit court and after a hearing, the circuit court on October 4, 1937, denied the petition.

Petitioner, now 80 years old, throughout a lifetime of hard work became the owner of considerable property, including five houses in Grand Haven and a large island, which has been divided into plots and is leased to various individuals for garden purposes. Up to the time of the appointment of his guardian, he appears to have managed his various properties in a careful and prudent manner. However, at the time of the order of the appointment, he was indebted in the amount of approximately $1,100. A large portion of this debt apparently resulted from *216 expenses of repair and upkeep of Ms property. He had previously purchased an automobile for $1,745 and had employed various young girls to drive the car for him. He paid them for these services and in one case rewarded one of the girls by purchasing a coat for her. In spite of the emphasis on this point by counsel for the guardian, no impropriety growing out of such relationship with these young women is suggested.

A year and a half prior to the proceedings in probate court, petitioner stated to his son that he had $3,600. There was no proof however that petitioner had in fact lost or squandered this amount of money, and from the evidence it appears that his remarks in this regard were merely in the nature of boastful statements.

Prior to the hearing in circuit court, the guardian was allowing petitioner $4 a week. The income of petitioner’s estate is approximately $90 per month.

On the hearing in circuit court, Dr. Teifer, a duly licensed and practicing physician, member of the State Board of Medical Examiners, and president of the Muskegon County Medical Association, testified on behalf of petitioner. The witness, although specializing in general and orthopedic surgery and general practice, has had occasion to have experience with mental cases. He examined petitioner and gave as his opinion that petitioner had a clear conception of his property, the rentals due on the property, was normal and could carry on the business that would be required of him in taking care of his business and rents; that he seemed to have a very good memory, was able to use the processes of reasoning and appeared to have an intelligent comprehension of his business affairs. He conversed rationally on various subjects and in the opinion of Dr. Teifer was competent to manage Ms own affairs.

*217 Dr. Eckerman, also a duly licensed physician from Muskegon, with an experience of 36 years in the practice of medicine, testified on behalf of petitioner. Dr. Eckerman had held the office of county physician for approximately 10 years and as such official had experience with mental cases. As part pf his work during 10 years for the county, he was required to be one of the examining physicians in all mental cases before the probate court and examined between 15 and 30 mental eases a year. Dr. Eckerman had examined petitioner and tested his mentality in general conversation. It was the belief of this witness that petitioner could use his powers of reasoning, had a comprehensive sense of his property holdings ; that his conversation was rational and that he seemed to have a good mental grasp of everything. He found nothing wrong with petitioner, satisfied himself on petitioner’s faculty of memory, and, to the best of his knowledge and belief, based on a physical and mental examination, he believed petitioner perfectly competent.

The evidence as to the mental competency of petitioner, who lived in Grand Haven, was, however, contradictory. Although these two prominent physicians from Muskegon testified that in their opinions, from an examination of petitioner, he was competent to handle his affairs, two other physicians testified that, in their opinions, he was incompetent. One of these latter was a specialist in mental diseases, but much of his testimony bearing upon his opinion was apparently rejected by the circuit judge, and, because of unwarranted assumptions of unproved facts in such testimony, it is easy to see why the court was not impressed. The other medical witness for the guardian, Dr. DeWitt, was a resident of the town in which petitioner resided. He testified that he had examined petitioner prior to two previous hearings *218 in probate court in 1934, and 1936, in proceedings involving petitioner’s mental competency. He gave as his opinion that petitioner was less mentally competent in 1936, than in 1934, when he was first adjudicated incompetent. Dr. DeWitt further testified that, in his opinion, petitioner was not mentally competent to have the care and management of his property. Unfortunately for its probative value, Dr. DeWitt’s opinion did not reveal any very extensive factual basis. In answer to a question on cross-examination regarding the basis for his opinion, he stated that he derived it partly from petitioner’s age and the hardening of his arteries, but on further inquiry stated that this was not the whole basis for his opinion. He was not pressed for a further explanation, when he agreed that he knew of nothing that would indicate that petitioner did not transact his business with study, prudence, and care.

There was testimony by one of the medical witnesses for the guardian that on the occasion of a mental examination, petitioner did not know the name of the governor of the State or the president; that he appeared to think President Wilson was still in office and had not heard of any of the national executives since that time. While he was able to do problems in arithmetic without pencil and paper, he failed on equally simple problems.

Since his adjudication as mentally incompetent, he married a woman 47 years old, being driven to South Bend, Indiana, for that purpose. Shortly before that time, he asked a young woman 24 years old to marry him. In his mental examination before one of the medical witnesses, he either did not know or did not recall what his wife’s name was before he married her; he also stated that he had married her because the probate judge had told him he would be *219 a free man if he were married. Although on the trial he remembered his wife’s last name and stated that he married her because he liked her, he, however, stated to one of the medical witnesses that he was not going to live with his wife after he got rid of the guardian.

Lay witnesses differed in their opinions as to petitioner’s competency. Petitioner himself was a'witness. On some matters he revealed good memory and ability to follow processes of reasoning. At other times, he was vague, contradictory, unresponsive and meaningless in his answers, digressive, and garrulous.

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Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 597, 286 Mich. 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-johnsons-estate-mich-1938.