Moore v. Coleman

30 S.E.2d 333, 126 W. Va. 815, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 48
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1944
DocketCC 685
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 S.E.2d 333 (Moore v. Coleman) 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
Moore v. Coleman, 30 S.E.2d 333, 126 W. Va. 815, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 48 (W. Va. 1944).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

Thomas S. Moore, Committee for Lucille M. Coleman, Incompetent, by bill in chancery against Lucille M. Coleman, Incompetent (known also as Lucille M. Davis), J. E. Springston, Fitzhugh Lee Springston, Guy M. Massey, Justice of the .Peace, Howard Donnelly, Constable, Andrew M. Saunders, Sam Shor and W. H. Hanson, sought to set aside a deed of conveyance of realty from the incompetent to Fitzhugh Lee Springston, to enjoin J. E. Springston from “harassing and molesting” the committee in the administration of the incompetent’s estate by bringing actions at law in her name against tenants occupying her property, and to restrain said justice and constable from “further proceeding in any manner in the aforesaid actions at law”. Defendants (other than Shor and Hanson) filed a joint and several demurrer and an answer to the bill of complaint, to which answer the plaintiff committee demurred; and the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, having overruled both demurrers, on joint application of the parties, certified here three questions of law arising upon the demurrers.

From the pleadings it appears that on May 23, 1936, the Mental Hygiene Commission of Kanawha County, upon examination “touching the sanity of” Lucille M. Coleman, adjudged her insane and committed her to the Spencer State Hospital. On May 19, 1938, John F. Ellison was appointed committee of her estate which, at the filing of this proceeding, consisted mainly of two parcels of real estate situate in Kanawha County and occupied by defendants Hanson and Shor as tenants. The commission on August *817 7, 1939, adjudged her “not insane”. Under date of January 16,1943, “Lucile M. Davis, (formerly Lucile M. Coleman) ” conveyed these parcels of land to Fitzhugh Lee Springston, a son of defendant J. E. Springston, by deed which has been recorded in the county clerk’s office and in which she reserved the rents, issues and profits therefrom for herself during her lifetime and further “for the use and benefit of Andrew Washington Saunders, a colored man who at one time saved the life of the party of the first part and has befriended her in many ways during” the latter’s fife, should he survive her, with remainder to the grantee named in the deed. In January, 1943, she executed and delivered to J. E. Springston, a power of attorney, authorizing him to manage her property, collect the rentals accruing therefrom, and institute actions in her name and do all other things affecting her real estate. Upon notice, directed to plaintiff’s incompetent and defendant J. E. Springston, reciting that the county court “has received and ordered filed the petition of John F. Ellison, Committee for Lucille Coleman, incompetent, requesting that he be discharged from his duties as such Committee and that a new committee be appointed”, the county court under order entered on May 13, 1943, accepted Ellison’s resignation, and, on its own motion, appointed plaintiff as committee to manage the estate of the alleged incompetent who, in the bill of complaint is described as a “white female, aged 33”, paroled from the Ohio State Penitentiary on March 1, 1943, an habitual drunkard, not capable of managing her own affairs, who has been arrested, convicted and confined in the jails of the City of Charleston and of Kanawha County, more than sixty times during the past eight years “upon charges of vagrancy, drunkenness, etc.”

The bill of complaint charges, and the answer' denies, that defendant J. E. Springston induced and persuaded Lucille M. Coleman to execute and deliver to him the power of attorney discussed above, and that the deed to Springston’s son was executed by reason of “undue cor *818 ruption, and overpowering influence exercised by” Spring-ston upon the grantor, whereby “she was completely deprived of her free will and power of free agency”. In addition to such denial the answer asserts facts in explanation and justification for these acts; but we are not, at this time, concerned therewith or with the difficulties which Ellison and Moore, as committee, have had with Springston relative to plaintiff’s averments that Ellison was so “harassed, badgered, and embarrassed in the carrying out of his duties as such Committee, by the said J. E. Springston” that he was compelled to resign or that, since plaintiff’s appointment, Springston has sought to discourage defendants Shor and Hanson from paying the monthly rentals, presumably — though not alleged — to plaintiff whose bill seeks to restrain the justice of peace and constable from enforcing collection of judgment rendered in an action instituted by J. E. Springston for the purpose of collecting rent from Shor and Hanson. We are concerned only with the questions certified, which are:

“FIRST: Whether or not the plaintiff has such an interest in the subject matter of this suit as to enable him to maintain his said bill of complaint.
“SECOND: Whether or not the order of the County Court of Kanawha County, West Virginia, entered on the 13th day of May, 1943, appointing Thomas S. Moore as Committee for Lucille M. Coleman, Incompetent, is void because of the alleged defect and irregularity of notice to the said Lucille M. Coleman of the hearing before the said County Court on May 10, 1943.
■ “THIRD: Whether or not the said County Court had the authority to inquire into the competency of the said Lucille M. Coleman to transact her personal business affairs, and to make such appointment of a Committee, in the absence of, or in spite of, a hearing by the County Mental Hygiene Commission as to the sanity of the said Lucille M. Coleman.”

*819 The litigable interest of plaintiff necessarily depends upon the validity of his appointment as committee. Jurisdiction of the county court to make the appointment emanates from the Constitution of West Virginia. See Article VIII, Section 24. The challenge of defendants that there is no authority in the committee to maintain his bill of complaint is built upon the premise that the notice to Lucille Coleman was void because (1) it did not show “she had been adjudged insance since the Mental Hygiene Commission had adjudged her not insane, or that she was “an addict and an imbecile or a mental defective, and (2) the notice failed to state the reason why a successor committee should be appointed. Because thereof defendants contend the county court was without authority to inquire into the alleged incompetent’s mental capacity.

It is perhaps expedient at the inception of this issue to dispose of the third question certified by referring to Doak, Admr. v. Smith, 93 W. Va. 133, 116 S. E. 691, which is authority for the principle that a finding of mental incapacity by some competent body or tribunal is not prerequisite to the jurisdiction of the county court to effect a committee’s appointment. In that case the lunacy commission, constituted under Acts of the Legislature, 1915, Chapter 58, had dismissed a charge of insanity against plaintiff’s intestate on December 19 and on June 15 following, the county court appointed a committee for him. The challenge that the court had no authority to make the appointment until the lunacy commission had first determined that the ward was insane is answered thus in the opinion (p. 135):

“Under the constitution, Art.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E.2d 333, 126 W. Va. 815, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-coleman-wva-1944.