Morse v. Caldwell

191 S.E. 479, 55 Ga. App. 804, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 22, 1937
Docket26106
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 191 S.E. 479 (Morse v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morse v. Caldwell, 191 S.E. 479, 55 Ga. App. 804, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 511 (Ga. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

1. The status of the ward in the present instance, an adult war veteran, is somewhat novel. Though the record does not disclose that he is non compos mentis, his property, to the extent of certain compensation or benefits received from the Federal Government, is controlled by a guardian. That appointment was made in pursuance of the act of 1925 (Ga. L. 1925, p. 270), as amended by the act of 1929 (Ga. L. 1929, p. 248), codified as chapter 49-8 in the present Code, which provides: “Whenever, pursuant to any law of the United States or regulation of the bureau, the director requires, prior to payment of benefits, that a guardian shall be appointed for a ward, such appointment shall be made in the manner hereinafter provided.” § 49-802. And “Where a petition shall be filed for the appointment of a guardian of a mentally incompetent ward, a certificate of the' director of the bureau or his authorized representative, setting forth the fact that such person has been rated incompetent by the bureau on examination in accordance with the laws and regulations governing such [810]*810bureau, and that the appointment of a guardian is a condition precedent to the payment of any moneys due such person by the bureau, shall be prima facie evidence of the necessity for such appointment, and the ordinaries of the several counties are hereby authorized to appoint guardians without a trial, as in section 49-604, for any incompetent ward entitled to any benefits which may be payable to such incompetent by the bureau or its successor." § 4-9-803. What definition of "incompetent" is applied by the veterans' administration, in determining whether or not the condition of a hospital patient requires that a guardian be appointed to receive and disburse for him such benefits as he may be entitled to, is not shown by the record. But upon the issuance of the certificate by the director or his authorized representative, "setting forth the fact that such person has been rated incompetent," etc., the court of ordinary may, upon a petition filed, appoint a guardian to handle the benefits due such person by the Federal Government. Except as to the relationship thus created for the special purpose named, it does not follow that the ward is not sui juris, and, with respect to his other property and purposes, entitled to assert for himself his full legal rights in and out of court.

The above analysis is set out as an approach to the question whether or not the appeal and affidavit filed under the joint oaths of the ward and his next friend in the present case are subject to the objections urged by the plaintiff in error. The Code, § 6-203, provides: "When any party, plaintiff or defendant, in any suit at law or proceeding in the court of ordinary, shall be unable to pay costs and give security as hereinbefore required, if such party shall make and file an affidavit in writing that he is advised and believes that he has good cause of appeal, and that owing to his poverty he is unable to pay the costs or give the security required by law in cases of appeal, such party may enter an appeal without the payment of costs or giving security, as the case may be, as hereinbefore required." The affidavit as originally filed set forth the requisite averments on the part of the ward. Being sworn to by him personally, it was sufficient to support the appeal, if he was in law competent to make such affidavit, notwithstanding any defect or deficiency in the averments made by his next friend in the same affidavit. With respect to this particular ward, the tes[811]*811timony of the guardian’s attorney in-fact is that an unsuccessful attempt had been made to have him adjudicated insane. In the hearing he participated as counsel. He does not claim that the ward is insane. He testifies that ordinarily he is “a fine fellow and smart.” In the lunacy hearing he introduced the available evidence, after being requested to act by the ordinary, though he did not initiate the proceeding. In the absence of any evidence in the record that the ward has since become non compos mentis, it must be presumed that his condition at the time of the adjudication still continues, and that, being an adult and sane, he was entitled to make the affidavit. In Formby v. Wood, 19 Ga. 581, upon the petition of the defendant Hunt representing himself as a lunatic, William Wood was appointed his guardian ad litem. Hunt personally entered an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of the complainant, the pauper’s affidavit being sworn to by himself. A motion was made to dismiss the appeal on the ground that no appeal could be made except by the guardian ad litem who had been appointed to defend for the defendant lunatic. The motion to dismiss was overruled, and the Supreme Court in affirming the judgment held that if the appeal affidavit of Hunt was made during a lucid interval his act was valid, and of course, the prima facie presumption was that it was so made. The evidence in the instant case shows the ward to be an epileptic. “'Epilepsy’ is a medical term used to designate a disease of the brain, which occurs in paroxysms with uncertain intervals between them. The disease is in the brain, and is generally organic; but it may be functional and symptomatic of irritations in other parts of the body. Epilepsy is not to be regarded as a form of insanity, in the sense that a person thus afflicted can be said to be permanently insane; for there may be little or no aberration in the intervals between the attacks.” 32 C. J. 610, § 64. We do not think it could be reasonably contended that an epileptic, when not in the throes of an attack, is less capacitated than a lunatic in a lucid interval. Under the ruling in the Formly ease, supra, it must be held that prima facie the ward was competent to sign and make oath to the appeal and affidavit, and that consequently by his act the appeal was valid.

It is contended by the plaintiff in error that the affidavit should have been made by the next friend, and that her allegations should [812]*812go, not as to the inability of the ward to pay the costs or give security, but as to her own inability to do so. In support of such contention we are cited to one or two eases involving an infant ward, where it was said that the averments must be as to the representative’s inability. The present case is distinguishable. The ward here is not an infant, and his incapacity exists only as to his right personally to receive and disburse the funds which he receives from the Federal Government. He is not, under any law of Georgia, to be deemed incompetent, in the state of the record, to manage any other fund or estate of his own. His situation is one in which this State, co-operating with the Federal Government for the benefit of war veterans, permits the appointment of the guardian for a special purpose, without making any adjudication as to the ward’s competency or incompetency otherwise to assert his legal rights in propria persona. We see no reason why the court might not assess costs against such a ward in the first instance, to be paid out of funds other than those derived from the Federal Government as compensation or other benefit; and, if so, why should an affidavit from the next friend be required in addition to that of the adult ward? Assuming, but not conceding, that it was incumbent on the next friend to aver her own inability because of her own poverty to pay the costs or give the requisite security, the affidavit when tested by her act was sufficient. As originally worded the affidavit did not allege such inability on her part.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.E. 479, 55 Ga. App. 804, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-caldwell-gactapp-1937.