Matter of Application of Clary

87 P. 580, 149 Cal. 732, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 300
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1906
DocketCrim. No. 1339.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 87 P. 580 (Matter of Application of Clary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Application of Clary, 87 P. 580, 149 Cal. 732, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 300 (Cal. 1906).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The petitioner, a patient confined in the Mendocino state hospital for the insane, applies for his discharge by habeas corpus on two grounds; first, that the commitment under which he is confined is void; second, that he is not insane.

1. The petition avers that he has applied on the same grounds to the superior court of Mendocino County, and to • the district court of appeal for the second district, for discharge on habeas corpus, that the superior court, after a hearing, denied the same, and that the district court of appeal, after a hearing, was unable to agree as to whether or not the *734 court which committed him had jurisdiction to commit him, and thereupon dismissed the proceedings.

A copy of the commitment is made part of the petition, but no other part of the record is exhibited. The commitment is as follows: “In the matter of the application for the commitment of Dennis G. Clary, an alleged insane person. Upon the petition of Paul Clary, dated Oct. 31, 1902, and a certificate of lunacy made by two duly qualified medical examiners in lunacy, which certificate is dated on the 6th day of November, 1902, and which is annexed hereto, and upon such other facts and information as were produced before me at a hearing in open court in the presence of said Clary duly had, and being satisfied that the above alleged insane person is insane and a proper subject for custody and treatment in an institution for the insane within the meaning of the statute, it is therefore hereby ordered that the said Dennis G. Clary be and hereby is adjudged insane, and that he be committed to the Mendocino state hospital. ’ ’

The recital that the hearing was “in the presence of said Clary” must be taken to mean that it was had in the presence of Dennis G. Clary, the alleged insane person, and not as referring to the Paul Clary who happened to prefer the charge of lunacy. The contrary is not alleged or claimed. The language of judgments and orders is not chosen by the adverse party, but is official and presumably fair and impartial. It is not subject to the common-law rules of pleadings made to secure to the opposite party precise information of the facts alleged against him. Where it has been considered necessary or proper, in framing a judgment or order, to recite the facts conferring jurisdiction to make it, it has been the custom, from time immemorial, to do so by a very brief statement of the general facts which give jurisdiction to act in the particular matter, and over the particular person affected. These statements are mere general conclusions of fact. From the nature and purpose of such recitals it follows that they must be given the utmost force and effect which the language employed will warrant. This rule must be observed in considering the effect of the commitment in the present ease, it being in effect also an adjudication that Dennis G. Clary was then insane.

When its recitals are so construed the objections of the *735 present petitioner are all refuted. The recital that the hearing was duly had in open court, in the presence of the person alleged to be insane, implies that everything was done which the law requires as essential to give jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter. Otherwise it would not be “duly had, ’ ’ and the recital would be untrue.

Tailing up the objections more in detail, they are each untenable. The record, by virtue of this recital, affirmatively shows jurisdiction. Upon a collateral attack, and in the absence of any specific averment that any other part of the record is inconsistent therewith, this is a sufficient showing of jurisdiction, even in the case of the judgment of an inferior tribunal, or a superior court or judge acting in a special statutory proceeding. The finding that Clary was “insane and a proper subject for custody and treatment in an institution foi>- the insane within the meaning of the statute” is sufficient to include the findings required by section 2217 of the Political Code, as amended in 1881, [Stats. 1881, p. 7], that he was “so far disordered in his mind as to endanger health, person or property.” We do not mean to intimate, however, that upon a collateral attack the absence of the statement of a proper finding in the record would be fatal to the validity of the judgment in an insanity proceeding, where the court had jurisdiction of the person adjudged insane. The recital that the hearing was “duly had” implies that due and lawful notice was given thereof to the alleged insane person, and that such giving of notice was proven to the satisfaction of the court, and is equivalent to a finding to that effect. It was not necessary that the record should, on its face, expressly state the particular statute under which the tribunal assumed to act. It is sufficient if there was legal authority under any statute in force at the time, for the proceeding actually had, and no reference to the statute was necessary.

It is contended, under the authority of In re Lambert, 134 Cal. 626, [86 Am. St. Rep. 296, 66 Pac. 851], that at the time this commitment was made, there was no valid statute in force authorizing the commitment of insane persons to state hospitals for the insane, and hence that the proceedings are necessarily void. It is said that that decision held the act of 1897 wholly void in that respect, and that the act *736 expressly repealed all prior statutes, thus leaving in force no law on the subject.

If this is true, then all of the hundreds of inmates of the state insane hospitals, committed thereto during the six years from 1897 until the passage of the act of 1903, [Stats. 1903, p. 485], are held without authority. A result so grave demands close scrutiny of the propositions on which it depends.

The act of 1897 provided, or attempted to provide, that any judge of the superior court of a county, could adjudge any person insane and commit him to a state hospital for the insane, without any process of law upon, or notice to, such person, without trial or hearing, and even without his presence or knowledge, upon the mere certificate of two physicians who had been authorized under the statute to act as “medical examiners in lunacy,” to the effect that they had made inquiry into the facts and had sufficiently examined such person, and that, in their opinion, after such inquiry and examination, such person was insane. It was an arbitrary proceeding under this provision which was considered and held void in the Lambert case above cited. No just criticism can be made of the decision upon that point. Such a procedure would clearly allow a person to be deprived of his liberty without notice or trial,—that is, without due process of law. It does not follow, however, that there was no other method authorized by the act of 1897, by which an insane person could legally be committed to a hospital, nor, if the act provided no other legal mode, does it follow that previous laws were thereby repealed so that no statute on the subject remained in force. The decision intimates that in special cases, as under section 8 of article III [Stats. 1897, p. 329], in which notice is provided by means of an arrest, the act may authorize commitments which would be lawful and valid.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Untitled California Attorney General Opinion
California Attorney General Reports, 1988
Campbell v. People
190 Cal. App. 2d 253 (California Court of Appeal, 1961)
Belknap v. Shock
24 S.E.2d 457 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1943)
State Ex Rel. Charette v. District Court
86 P.2d 750 (Montana Supreme Court, 1939)
In Re McKelvey
64 P.2d 1002 (California Court of Appeal, 1937)
In Re Mooney
45 P.2d 388 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)
Christiansen v. Weston
284 P. 149 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1930)
Sapiro v. Frisbie
270 P. 280 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
Matter of Application of O'Connor
155 P. 115 (California Court of Appeal, 1915)
McMahon v. Mead
139 N.W. 122 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1912)
In Re Lewis
105 P. 774 (California Court of Appeal, 1909)
Napa State Hospital v. Dasso
96 P. 355 (California Supreme Court, 1908)
State Commission in Lunacy v. Eldridge
94 P. 597 (California Court of Appeal, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 P. 580, 149 Cal. 732, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-application-of-clary-cal-1906.