Interdiction of Grevenig

115 So. 133, 164 La. 1026, 1927 La. LEXIS 1861
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 28, 1927
DocketNo. 26630.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 115 So. 133 (Interdiction of Grevenig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interdiction of Grevenig, 115 So. 133, 164 La. 1026, 1927 La. LEXIS 1861 (La. 1927).

Opinion

BRUNOT, J.

The relatives of Miss Rosalie Elizabeth Grevenig had her placed in the Louisiana Retreat for observation and mental treatment. While she was an inmate of that institution, she was interdicted. After her interdiction she was confined in the retreat for several months, when she escaped from custody, and, through an attorney at law, filed a suit against her euratrix attacking the validity of the judgment of interdiction upon the following alleged grounds, which- are set up in articles 2 and 3 of the petition, to wit:

That all of the interdiction proceedings were ex parte; that neither the proceedings in that suit nor the judgment rendered therein was had contradictorily with her; that the appointment of a curator ad hoc to represent her in said proceedings was a nullity; and that service of the citation and petition for interdiction upon her while she was confined in the Louisiana Retreat was contrary to law.

The prayer of the petition is for a judgment annulling the judgment of interdiction and for an injunction restraining its execution. The answer of the euratrix puts the said allegations of the petition at issue, and avers that it is not alleged in the petition that the interdict is now or was sane at the time the interdiction proceedings were had. On the issues thus joined the case was tried, and for written reasons assigned the following decree was rendered:

“The judgment of the court therefore is that the demand of plaintiff be rejected, and that Miss Grevenig, for the time being, for her own good and protection, be committed to the care of the Louisiana Retreat, reserving, of course, the question whether with changing conditions she should not be removed to some other institution or given her liberty.”

On thé same day the judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demand was rendered, Mr. J. Olin Chamberlain, the attorney of record for the interdict in that suit, filed an opposition to the provisional account of the euratrix of the interdict, upon the ground that he was a creditor of the estate of the interdict in the sum of $700 for professional services rendered the interdict in the suit to annul the judgment of interdiction. This opposition was heard and dismissed. Both of the foregoing judgments were appealed from, the appeals were perfected, and they are presented to this court in one transcript and as consolidated appeals.

*1029 We have read the record carefully and find that while the petition presents but one question for determination, viz., the nullity vel non of the judgment of interdiction, expert and lay testimony was admitted, without objection, to show the condition of mind of the interdict at the time the interdiction suit was filed and at the time the proceedings herein were had. The learned judge of the civil district court has reviewed the testimony in the record and has correctly summarized the facts which, with reasonable certainty, are established by it. We therefore quote from his written reasons for judgment as follows:

“It is proved that citation was served upon defendant. It is proved that when she was visited, before the delays for answering had expired, by an attorney who had been employed by her in business which she previously had, she told him that she was content to let the law take its course. The testimony of this attorney, Judge John B. Fisher, is that she did not retain him to defend the suit. His testimony to that effect is not disputed by the interdict herself, who was not put upon the stand. There is no reason to doubt the statement made by Judge Fisher, and I take the fact to be proved according to his statement.
“It is proved, also, that if she had desired to consult another attorney, she could have done so without difficulty. The record is full of proof that any one who wished to see her could do so. She was not prevented from consulting with any one with whom she wished to consult. The delay for answering having expired, without any appearance of the defendant, this court appointed Judge Fisher to represent her, and selected him not only because he is a respectable and competent member of the bar, but because the court was informed that he had been the attorney of Miss Grevenig and her mother. This attorney put the case at issue. Medical experts were appointed by the court, and the case came on to be heard in the regular and formal manner, and judgment was rendered1 after hearing the testimony of Dr. O’Hara, one of the experts. All the formalities then were strictly observed. The charges of collusion and ill practices are supported by nothing in the record. There is no word of testimony which impugns the perfect good faith and disinterestedness of the persons who moved for the interdiction. The demand then for a nullity of the judgment must fall.
“Notwithstanding the pleadings of plaintiff present only the issue of nullity vel non of the .judgment, testimony was offered, and received without objection, to the condition of mind of the interdict at the time of the original proceedings and at present time, and, as the record now stands, this may be treated as a suit with alternate demand for the raising of the interdiction. On that issue, for the plaintiff, there is the testimony of Dr. Lopez, Dr. Fenno, and Dr. Gazenavette. These gentlemen are experts in mental diseases, of good standing, but they did not avail themselves of data readily at hand which if consulted' ought to have affected their judgment; that is to say, although they knew this lady had been confined to the Louisiana Retreat under the supervision of the superintendent and nurses of that institution, and had been treated during that period by Dr. Unsworth, the physician of the retreat, none of them consulted any of these persons for the ascertainment of facts which the experts, it seems to me, must have known were in their possession. These experts properly would have guarded themselves against being influenced by the opinion of Dr. Dnsworth. I do not see, however, with regard to the proper performance of their duties, they could have deprived themselves of the facts within Dr. Unsworth’s knowledge, and which he could have put at their disposal.
“These gentlemen did not apply to the family of Miss Grevenig for information. I do not appreciate that they had a right to assume that the family, who are respectable, decent people of this community, would have misled them. If the members of the family were prejudiced, the experts should have endeavored to explore the grounds of prejudice so as to be able, if necessary, to discount the statements made by members of the family. I must say, therefore, that these experts based their opinion upon an incomplete investigation and an incomplete appreciation of the facts. I am informed by all of them that mental diseases frequently produce no physical effects ascertainable by visual observation; that frequently the intellect appears to be intact, and that paranoiacs have the ability, when under observation, to mask their symptoms and to hide their delusions. For this reason it is all the more necessary that the gentlemen, in the position that these experts were in, should make their investigations as broad and searching as possible.

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115 So. 133, 164 La. 1026, 1927 La. LEXIS 1861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interdiction-of-grevenig-la-1927.