In re the Guardianship of Sall

110 P. 32, 59 Wash. 539, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 1235
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1910
DocketNo. 8680
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 110 P. 32 (In re the Guardianship of Sall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 the Guardianship of Sall, 110 P. 32, 59 Wash. 539, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 1235 (Wash. 1910).

Opinions

Chadwick, J.

Charles G. Sail, a resident of the state of Minnesota, filed his petition under chapter 118 of the Laws of 1909, page 408 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1622 et seq.), praying that he be appointed guardian of the estate of his brother, Neis Oscar Sail, whom he alleged to be an incompetent person. At the time of the application, Neis Oscar Sail was of the age of forty-five years. For several years he had been a resident of the territory of Alaska, where he with two others discovered a group of mining claims in the year 1907. In December of that year the claims were bonded to James J. Godfrey, who resists the petition for guardianship. By the terms of the option agreement, a certain sum was paid down and a deed was executed and placed in escrow at the Puget Sound National Bank, which bank was made the agent of all parties to the escrow agreement, with power to receive the deferred payments, and upon final payment to surrender the deed. In November, 1909, when these proceedings were commenced, there was $1,985 of the moneys coming to Neis Oscar Sail and paid under the option on deposit in the Puget Sound National Bank and subject to his check.

Prior to April, 1908, Neis Oscar Sail had been a man of usual mental strength, but in that month, while with a sled and team upon the Chitna river in Alaska, the ice broke, precipitating the team and sled and Mr. Sail into the waters of the river. He floated under the ice for a distance of about seventy feet, when he was rescued by his companions. He suffered an immediate shock to his nervous system. Thereafter he was in ill health, and it was noticed that his conduct and demeanor toward others was not as it had formerly been. He was taken to the hospital at Valdez, from whence, after some weeks’ treatment, he suddenly disappeared, and was afterwards found by the United States marshal’s office acting through the intervention of Senator Nelson of Minne[541]*541sota. When found he was working in a railroad camp at Cordova. He seemed to have forgotten his name; at any rate he was working under an assumed name, and there is evidence tending to show that he at times lost the faculty of remembering his own identity. At the railroad camp he is said to have .displayed almost superhuman strength, a condition not unusual in those of failing mentality, and in some cases a marked symptom of mental alienation. Thereafter he came to Seattle, where several of his former friends met and conversed with him. While they were not willing to say that he is not capable of attending to his own business, they all agree that they would not trust him to attend to business of any kind for them. The opinion is expressed that he was “batty,” or “off his nut,” and it is shown that, contrary to his former disposition, he was silent, melancholy, and morose; that when spoken to he would answer questions sullenly, almost insolently. There is evidence to show that he was afraid of losing his money and dying poor, and that the banks were unsafe; and while at the hotel, the clerk says that “he would walk around; walk to his room six or seven times in ten minutes.” In November, 1908, he disappeared from the Differ hotel, and has not since been seen or heard of, although search has been made in Alaska, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, and other places. These are the facts which moved the court to appoint Charles E. Sail guardian of the estate of his brother, and are sufficient, in the judgment of this court, if the law does not intervene to prevent it.

Mr. Godfrey has appealed, assigning as error that the superior court had no jurisdiction to appoint a guardian' for a nonresident, or one not within the jurisdiction of the court. It will be observed that chapter 118, Laws of 1909, page 408 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1622 et seq.), refers only to property, and has nothing whatever to do with the guardianship of the persons of the classes referred to therein. It provides in § 1 that a petition shall be filed showing, not only that the incompetent person has property needing care and attention, [542]*542but that the owner is a resident of the county where the petition is filed. Section 4 of the act provides that, where the incompetent person resides out of the state of Washington and has property within said state requiring the care of a guardian, and a petition is filed in the county where such incompetent has property, service by publication may be had.

It is contended that § 1 defines the jurisdiction of the court, and that § 4 cannot be given effect unless it is also made to appear that the incompetent is, in fact, domiciled in the county. If this effect is given to the statute, we think, unquestionably, that the contentions of the appellant should prevail. But, construing the act as a whole, and recognizing the necessity as well as the duty of the state to protect the estates of incompetent persons, the construction put upon the statute by appellant may well be doubted. A careful examination of the law on our own account convinces us that the superior courts have an inherent jurisdiction to protect estates of nonresident, incompetent persons; and that, while it is generally said that the power to appoint guardians is purely statutory, the power in fact lies in the sovereignty of the state, and the procedure only is statutory. In England, from whence we have derived our common law and the-accepted heads of equity jurisdiction, the king assumed the-care of insane persons and their property in parens patriae. After a declaration or finding of insanity, the jurisdiction in lunacy cases was held in some early cases to be no longer exercisable under the king’s sign manual, but in virtue of the general powers of the court. Ex parte Grimstone, 2 Amb. 106; Burford v. Lenthall, 2 Atk. 551; In re Fitzgerald, 1 Ll. & G. t. P. 20, 2 Sch. & Lef. 489.

Mr. Woerner, in his work on the American Law of Guardianship, § 18, says that it is the prevalent conviction of lawyers, judges, and text-writers in America that, in the absence-of countervailing statutes, American courts having equity powers possess a general jurisdiction for the appointment of guardians. Story draws no distinction between the powers of [543]*543American and English courts in this respect; Story’s Eq. Jur., ch. 35; and Mr. Pomeroy, in his Equity Jurisprudence, at § 1306, says that American courts have this power in so far as it has not been taken away by statute. It is, therefore, held that, where the power to appoint guardians has been conferred upon other courts, as, for instance, the probate court of the territory before the creation of the state of Washington, the power is cumulative and concurrent with the court of chancery. Lee v. Lee, 55 Ala. 590; Wilson v. Roach, 4 Cal. 362; Ex parte Miller, 109 Cal. 643, 42 Pac. 428; Board of Children's Guardians v. Shutter, 139 Ind. 268, 34 N. E. 665, 31 L. R. A. 740; Corrie's Case, 2 Bland. (Md. Ch.) 488; Wilcox v. Wilcox, 14 N. Y. 575; Durrett v. Davis, 24 Gratt. (Va.) 302; Glasscott v. Warner, 20 Wis. *654; Harlin v. Stevenson, 30 Iowa 371; Sterritt v. Robinson, 17 Iowa 61.

It would follow, then, that the statute, in declaring that the court might appoint a guardian for the property of an incompetent person resident of the county, would not bar a court of general jurisdiction of its general equity powers, provided the constitution is broad enough to warrant its exercise. That the superior court of this state has such general jurisdiction has been frequently declared. In Moore v. Perrott, 2 Wash. 1, 25 Pac. 906, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
110 P. 32, 59 Wash. 539, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-guardianship-of-sall-wash-1910.