Kimball v. Fisk

39 N.H. 110
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 39 N.H. 110 (Kimball v. Fisk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimball v. Fisk, 39 N.H. 110 (N.H. 1859).

Opinion

Bell, J.

Though the proceedings in this case are not such as we think they should have been, yet it by no means follows that they are void, or that they can be impeached, wheii they are collaterally and incidentally brought in question.

The want of jurisdiction of the subject matter renders the proceedings void. State v. Richmond, 26 N. H. 439. This case is not one of that class. By the general statute relative to the jurisdiction of judges of probate (Revised Statutes, ch. 152, sec. 4), it is provided, that “ such judge shall have jurisdiction in relation to the appoint[117]*117ment and removal of guardians of minors, insane persons and spendthrifts.”

The provisions relative to the appointment of guardians for the insane (Revised Statutes, eh. 150, secs. 10, 11), are very brief. They provide that “ upon application of any relative, or friend of any insane person, or upon the like application of the overseers of the poor of the town in which such person lives, made to the judge of probate for the county in which such town, is situate, that a guardian may be appointed over such person, the judge shall cause the selectmen of the town in which such person lives to make inquisition thereinto. If, upon the return of such inquisition, and due examination had, it shall be decreed that such person is an insane person, the judge shall appoint a guardian over such person.; but no such decree or appointment shall be made until such person shall have been cited to appear and show cause against the same.”

Here the judge acted upon the application of the overseers of the poor of a town in which the supposed insane person lived, within his county, alleging his insanity, and praying that a guardian should be appointed. These are all the facts required by these sections to give to the court jurisdiction in cases of this kind, so far as the subject matter is concerned. To render the proceedings regular, it is further required that there should be an inquisition and notice to the party; but the court must have jurisdiction of the subject matter before either of these can be ordered.

"Want of jurisdiction of the person of a party, by the service of process, or notice, renders proceedings voidable, not void. 26 N. H. 241. They may be avoided by those who are injured, or who have just cause to complain, until they have been confirmed; but the exception may be waived, and the proceedings confirmed by the same parties at any time before they have been actually avoided. The record before us shows that proper notice was ordered, [118]*118and a kind of notice was in fact given. But the provision of the statute is but in fact a repetition of a well settled principle of the common law, and the want of the notice prescribed by both merely affected the regularity of the proceedings.

The statute required an inquisition. Here we find an order of the court for an inquisition, and a precept directed to the selectmen of the proper town, referring to the petition, stating that it represented the plaintiff as an insane pei’son, and praying an inquisition, and that a guardian should be appointed, and directing them to visit him and make personal examination and inquiry as to his condition, and certify the same to the court. This is a most defective document, wanting almost every thing that it ought to contain to guide the selectmen in the discharge of their duties ; duties which it cannot safely be assumed they will know without instruction.

The return, or inquisition, shows that the selectmen visited the plaintiff, made a personal examination and careful inquiry into his condition, and they certify that in their opinion he is an insane person. This, too, is very deficient. It does not show, as it ought, how they performed their duties, that the court may judge whether they are properly performed, and both of them, upon proper objections, might have been set aside, either in the court of probate, or upon appeal, because, in a case involving the right to liberty and the control and enjoyment of a man’s property, nothing should be left to presumptions. It should appear that every thing was done rightly and legally. But the selectmen here found the fact which the precept seems to require them to ascertain, that the plaintiff was insane. The papers thus contain the substance of what the law intended ; and we are of opinion, as was held in H- v. S-, 4 N. H. 65, that they cannot be treated as nullities; and for the same reason the decrees of the probate court are not made void by this defect. Raymond v. Wyman, 18 Me. (6 Shep.) 386.

[119]*119There does not appear to be any formal record of a decree that the plaintiff was a person of unsound mind; and it is contended that without such a decree there can be no valid appointment of a guardian. And we think that is clearly so, not only from the nature of the case, but from the terms of the statute before cited. But the defect here seems not to be the want of such a decree, but rather the neglect to make a proper record of it. The record of the letter of guardianship contains a recital of such a decree, and the application for the appointment of the defendant as guardian distinctly admits it; and we- think there can be no doubt of the power of the court to amend the record by entering up such a decree, nor of the propriety of its exercise, upon proper notice to parties interested. Remick v. Butterfield, 31 N. H. 70.

The plaintiff was the party chiefly affected by these proceedings, and though they are wisely designed as well for the safety of all who may have occasion to deal with the party, or his guardian, as for his own security, yet, so far as they affect the party himself, he may waive the exception, if he has capacity; and this we think must be regarded as effectually done in this case, by the petition of the plaintiff for the appointment of the defendant as his guardian, if we should assume, or it should be proved, as the plaintiff now asserts, that he was then of sound mind.

In the argument it has been suggested that the courts of probate are coui’ts of merely statutory, special and limited jurisdiction, and this view is expressed in some books to which we are accustomed to look as authority; but we are much inclined to question the soundness of the opinion. The powers of courts of probate were conferred in Massachusetts on the county courts, and in some cases on special commissioners, while New-Hampshire was subject to that colony, but they were conferred as a body of well known principles and rules ; a settled and general juris[120]*120diction then existing at common law in the ordinary or ecclesiastical courts. The statutes of the colony did not attempt to define or prescribe the powers of those courts in general, otherwise than by a reference to the existing law of the land. The like state of things has continued from that day to the present. The jurisdiction of probate courts has been vested in different officers at successive periods in the history of the Province ; but, excepting in a few cases, the general system of probate jurisdiction has remained as defined at common law. The legislature have attempted to correct many errors into which ill-informed judges have fallen, so that now many matters are regulated, partly by common law and partly by statute, though the general system is that of the common law. The jurisdiction of probate courts was at common law restricted to proceedings relative to the estates of persons deceased.

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Related

Sawyer v. Banfield
55 N.H. 149 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1875)

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.H. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-v-fisk-nh-1859.