In Re: Wood

15 S.E.2d 393, 123 W. Va. 421, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 56
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1941
Docket9107
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 S.E.2d 393 (In Re: Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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: Wood, 15 S.E.2d 393, 123 W. Va. 421, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 56 (W. Va. 1941).

Opinion

Lovins, Judge:

Florence Dowden Wood and Rolena Dowden Core filed their petition in the Circuit Court of Marion County, to have their mother, Ruth T. Dowden, declared a mental defective, under the provisions of Code, 27-3-13. An answer was filed by Mrs. Dowden. denying the allegations of the petition. After hearing evidence in support of and against the petition, the trial court entered an order dismissing the petition and finding that petitioners failed to show that Ruth T. Dowden was insane or a mental defective as “intended and provided” in the Code section above mentioned. A writ of error was granted to that order of the trial court.

Code, 27-3-13, provides that if a person is suspected of being insane but has not been so found by a county mental hygiene commission, the circuit court of the county of which the person is an inhabitant, upon the application of any person interested and after five days notice to the person suspected, “* * * shall * * * proceed to examine into his state of mind, and if satisfied that he is an insane person or a mental defective shall so find.” The section further provides that such a finding shall be authority for the appointment of a committee for such person by the county court. The petition filed by plaintiffs in error asked that Mrs. Dowden be adjudged a mental defective and incompetent.

The errors assigned are the failure of the trial court to find and adjudge Mrs. Dowden a mental defective, and the refusal to consider photostatic copies of bank deposit sheets, showing the status of the accounts of Mrs. Dowden, her son, James E. Dowden, Jr., and his daughter, Rolena Dowden.

*423 .It appears from the record herein that Mrs. Dowden’s husband, Dr. James E. Dowden, Sr., deceased, devised and bequeathed his entire estate to his wife, including real estate in Fairmont worth about $100,000.00. Mrs. Wood, Mrs. Core, and James E. Dowden, Jr., are the only children of Mrs. Dowden. After Dr. Dowden’s death, Mr. Core assisted his mother-in-law in the management of her estate. Upon Mr. Core’s death, James E. Dowden, Jr., took charge of his mother’s affairs until 1933 or 1934, when an attorney in Fairmont was given a power-of-attorney to look after Mrs. Dowden’s business affairs. This was revoked in November, 1937, and Mrs. Dowden gave her son James a power-of-attorney to manage her estate. Much evidence was presented by plaintiffs in error, tending to show that James E. Dowden, Jr., is a failure as to business and domestic affairs, and that he is addicted to alcohol, and is squandering his mother’s estate, taking advantage of her feeble-mindedness. Fol7 lowing this line of evidence, the aforementioned bank deposit sheets were offered to show that from the time James was vested with the power-of-attorney in 1937, his mother’s account shows no further deposits, while the accounts of himself and his daughter grew. Also it is shown that about a year and a half after the last power-of-attorney was executed, James obtained a deed from his mother conveying to him about one-half of her valuable income-producing real estate, under alleged questionable circumstances.

The evidence mentioned in the preceding paragraph, we hold, departs from the issue developed by the petition and the answer denying its allegations. This proceeding is based solely upon the statute referred to, and by that statute the circuit court could find only that Mrs. Dowden is an insane person or a mental defective. As stated, the petition sought a finding that Mrs. Dowden was a mental defective. We find no error, therefore, in the trial court’s failure to consider the bank deposit sheets since they throw no light on the state of Mrs. Dowden’s mind.- Likewise, assuming that the son’s wastefulness, lack of sobriety, or business ability, and the foolishness of Mrs. Dow- *424 den in turning over her affairs to him, have all been firmly established by the record, we should not reverse the judgment of the trial court. As a general rule, courts have no jurisdiction or authority to interfere with the right of persons to dispose of property in any manner they may see fit and especially, in a statutory proceeding expressly for the purpose of determining mental defectiveness, such factors have little bearing. We express no opinion, however, as to the validity of the conveyance of real estate, or any transfer of personal property made by Mrs. Dowden to her son.

It is asserted that the intention of the statute under which this proceeding was brought is to protect such persons “as Mrs. Dowden is shown by the evidence to be”, referring to the materiality of the circumstances surrounding the management of her property and the squandering thereof. In three of the four cases cited in support of this proposition, counsel overlook the fact that the statutes there involved expressly provide for a determination of whether a person is insane or mentally unsound, so that he is unable to look after his business or property. These cases are Johnson v. Deposit Co., 104 Md. 460, 65 Atl. 333; Schulmeyer v. McAllister, 171 Cal. 340, 153 P. 233; In Re Coburn, 11 Cal. App. 604, 105 P. 924. The other case, Commonwealth v. Schneider, 59 Pa. 328, involves a Pennsylvania enactment of June, 1836, wherein the proceeding could be brought only by a relative by blood or marriage or a person interested in the estate in order to preserve the property for his benefit. Contrast our Code, 27-3-13, wherein “any person interested” may bring the proceeding in the circuit court, or Code, 27-3-3, wherein “any resident of a county” may so proceed before the mental hygiene commission. It should be pointed out also that in the Schneider case the opinion includes the following: “Mere weakness of mind, but not an abnormal condition, and short of idiocy, is not a ground for a commission.”

Plaintiffs in error argue that the trial court was led into error by not distinguishing between the terms “insane person” and “mental defective” as used in Code, 27- *425 3-13. For a definition of mental defective, they point to Code, 27-8-3, wherein mental defectives are defined for the purposes of Article 8, and which article relates solely to the West Virginia Training School. This, it is argued, reveals what the legislature meant by “mental defectives”, and that “it plainly shows that a mental defective is less than insane.” Prior to the Code revision of 1931, the circuit court, under the provisions of Barnes’ Code, 1923, Chapter 58, Sec. 26, which section in the revised edition appears as Chapter 27, Article 3, Section 13, had only the power to find the suspected person insane, the term “or a mental defective” being added by the revisers of the Code.

We agree that the terms “insane person” and “mental defective” were intended to convey different meanings. The heading of Chapter 27, “Insane Persons and Mental Defectives” as well as the wording of Section 13 of Article 3 seem to so import. However, we cannot agree that the definition included in the article relating to the West Virginia Training School is indicative of what the legislature had in mind in adopting the 1931 revision of the Code, and adding “mental defectives” to the statute under which this proceeding was brought.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E.2d 393, 123 W. Va. 421, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wood-wva-1941.