In re to Appoint a Special Guardian for Bassett

68 Mich. 348
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 68 Mich. 348 (In re to Appoint a Special Guardian for Bassett) 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 to Appoint a Special Guardian for Bassett, 68 Mich. 348 (Mich. 1888).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

We granted a writ of certiorari to bring up the record in the probate court for the county of Kalamazoo, in the matter of the proceedings of the judge of probate of that county in appointing a special guardian of George R. Bassett, an alleged incompetent person.

The probate judge has made return to the writ, from which it appears that on the ninth day of February, A. D. 1887, one Louisa S. Bassett applied by petition to said judge, asking that a general guardian be appointed of the person and estate of George R. Bassett. She represented that she is an aunt of said George R. Bassett; that he is of the age of 21 years or thereabouts, and is an inhabitant or resident in the county of Kalamazoo, and is possessed of real estate situate in said county and elsewhere of the estimated value of $50,-000 or thereabouts, as petitioner is informed and verily believes. She further, in her petition, represented that it is necessary that a guardian of the person and estate of the said George R. Bassett be appointed, for the following reason, [350]*350viz.: That said George B. Bassett is mentally incompetent to have the care and management of his said property; that he has been, from boyhood up, of feeble health, and that his mental condition has never been normal; that he came of age on the thirteenth day of October last, and that since said time he has steadily squandered his property and wasted his estate, and that he is continually wasting the same, and is a person of feeble mind at the present time.

The petition does not state the names of the nearest of kin, or other persons interested in said estate, who would be heirs in case of the intestacy of said George R. Bassett.

The judge of probate, acting upon this petition, appointed a time of hearing, and ordered notice to'be served upon Bassett, the alleged incompetent.

Bassett filed an answer, asserting that the court had not acquired jurisdiction by the filing of the petition, denied the allegations of the petition, and denied the right or power of the probate court to appoint any guardian over his person or property. A hearing was had, and proofs taken, and the probate judge thereupon made an order as follows:

“It is ordered and decreed that James B. Cobb be, and he is hereby, appointed guardian of said George R. Bassets; and it is further ordered that said James B. Cobb file a bond in the penal sum of five thousand dollars, with sufficient surety to be approved by said court, before entering upon the discharge of his duties as such guardian, and that upon filing and approval of such bond letters of guardianship issue to him in the usual form.”

An appeal was taken by- Bassett from this order to the circuit court. Thereupon Louisa S. Bassett presented a petition to the probate judge for the appointment of a special guardian pending the appeal. In this petition she set out that she is a sister of the deceased father of said George R. Bassett, and that he has no father, mother, brother, sister, child, nor children. She also set out the appointment of the general guardian, and the appeal taken from the order [351]*351to the circuit court oí the county of Kalamazoo, and the reasons why a special guardian should be appointed pending the appeal.

This application was met with a motion to dismiss.the petition, and all proceedings under it, for 18 reasons, of which a few only will be noticed here.

The first is based upon the insufficiency of the petition for the appointment of a guardian to confer jurisdiction, and for not complying with the provisions of the statute in regard to the appointment of special guardians.

Second. That the petition does not show that Louisa S. Bassett is such a relative as is contemplated by the statute, who is authorized to make such application, or that she is such a person as would inherit any of the property of George E. Bassett if he should die intestate.

Fourth. Because the petition does not show, by facts and ■circumstances, that George E. Bassett is a mentally incompetent person, nor set forth the causes of the alleged incompetency.

Fifteenth. That the original petition for the apr ointment of a general guardian is void, and confers no jurisdiction on the court to appoint a general guardian, and that the alleged appointment of a general guardian is void.

Section 6314, How. Stat., provides:

“ When the relations or friends of any insane person, or of ■any person who, by reason of extreme old age or other cause, is mentally incompetent to have the charge and management of his property, * * * shall apply to the judge of probate to have a guardian appointed for him, .the judge shall cause a notice to be given to the supposed insane or incompetent person of the time and place of hearing the case, not less than fourteen days before the time so appointed.”

The statute does not state what the application shall contain, but manifestly it must contain a statement of facts which will authorize the appointment to be made, and it must upon its face appear to be made by the persons named in the statute. The petition should show all persons who will be affected by the action sought to be taken; and this [352]*352would manifestly include the presumptive heirs at law and distributees.

In the ease of a married man, no one is so deeply interested as his wife, and children, if they have any, inasmuch as the appointment of a guardian interferes directly with the control and possession of the household. No action which so-interferes can be proper without bringing before the court the persons liable to be so affected; and, while it may be proper for any near heir presumptive to make the application, it should show how far there are other persons concerned in the action sought.

In this case Bassett was a married man, and his wife was living, and the person most nearly related to him, and most to be affected by the proceedings. She is not, however, mentioned in the petition, nor does the fact that Bassett was a married man appear therefrom. The petition was defective-in not stating this fact. The importance of this is more manifest when we consider that in cases of this kind the-guardian appointed by the judge of probate controls both person and property. Taff v. Hosmer, 14 Mich. 255; How. Stat. § 6316.

This petition is not open to the objections discussed In re Brown, 45 Mich. 326 (7 N. W. Rep. 899), and In re Storick, 64 Id. 685 (31 N. W. Rep. 582). In the Brown Case the petition failed to state that the person whom it was sought to-place under guardianship was mentally incompetent, but merely set forth that he was incompetent to have the care and management of his property. It was held that the petition was insufficient; that the incompetency set out in the petition is not necessarily mental incompetency; that the statute contemplates the existence of insanity, or of mental infirmity that is equivalent in destroying mental competency.

In the Storick Case the petition represented that it was-[353]*353necessary that a guardian be appointed for the following reasons, viz.:

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Bluebook (online)
68 Mich. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-to-appoint-a-special-guardian-for-bassett-mich-1888.