Robinson v. Winstead

52 S.E.2d 118, 189 Va. 100, 1949 Va. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 7, 1949
DocketRecord No. 3491
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 S.E.2d 118 (Robinson v. Winstead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Winstead, 52 S.E.2d 118, 189 Va. 100, 1949 Va. LEXIS 153 (Va. 1949).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a habeas corpus proceeding which is before us on a writ of error to a final judgment of the Hustings Court of the city of Roanoke refusing to discharge the petitioner, Reginal Robinson, from the custody of Edgar L. Winstead, sergeant of the city of Roanoke, by whom he is held pending admission to the State Colony for Epileptics and Feeble-Minded at Petersburg, pursuant to an adjudication that petitioner is feeble-minded and should be confined at that institution.

The gist of the petitioner’s case is that he is a minor of the age of fifteen years, and that his commitment is void because of the fact that his mother, his custodian, was not, as required by the statute (Code, sec. 1079, as amended), summoned or notified to appear at the hearing before the commission which found that he is feeble-minded.

Whether this position is correct turns upon the proper interpretation of Code, sec. 1078, as amended by Acts 1920, ch. 262, pp. 382, 383, and Code, sec. 1079, as amended by Acts 1946, ch. 281, p. 475, the pertinent portions of which are printed in the margin.

Under Code, sec. 1078, as amended,1 “any reputable [103]*103citizen of the State may file a petition” in the designated court, or before the designated judge or justice, “setting forth under oath the circumstances indicating the feeble-mindedness of the person named, the facts of his social and financial condition and surroundings, and the names and financial condition of the person, if any, having the custody or control, and on whom he is dependent, together with the names of his parents, or guardian, if he be a minor, or of the next of kin, if any person occupying any of these relations” to the suspected person “be known to the petitioner to be living in the county or city in which the petition is filed.”

Section 1079, as amended,2 provides that the judge or justice with whom the petition is filed shall (1) “issue a warrant ordering such alleged feeble-minded person to be brought before him,” and (2) “summon the custodian if any of the alleged feeble-minded person, together with the parent, guardian, or next of kin named in the petition if they are found in his county or city.” This section further requires that two physicians, or one physician and a certified clinical psychologist, be summoned, who, together with the judge or justice, “shall constitute a commission to determine whether or not such person is feeble-minded as alleged,” and whether he “is under such proper supervision, care or control as to insure the welfare of himself, others or the community.”

[104]*104Under the provisions of Code, sec. 1080, as amended by Acts 1920, ch. 262, p. 384, “If the commission be satisfied that such person is feeble-minded,” the judge' or justice acting on the commission may commit him “to a private institution approved by the State board of charities and corrections, or to a State colony for the feeble-minded. And the said judge or justice may commit said feeble-minded person to the custody of the sheriff of the county or sergeant of the city in which said commission is held, or to some other responsible person pending admission into the colony for the feeble-minded.” .

The record before us shows that on April 21, 1948, in accordance with the provisions of Code, sec. 1078, as amended, a petition was filed with the assistant civil and police justice of the city of Roanoke by a probation officer of the Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court of the city, alleging that Raymond Robinson3 was “suspected of being feeble-minded.” The petition further alleged that the boy was under the care of his mother, Mamie Robinson, at the named address in the city where they both resided, and that her “financial condition” was “poor.”

As required by Code, sec. 1079, as amended, a warrant was issued for the boy and he was brought before the assistant civil and police justice on April 22.

On the same day a commission consisting of the assistant civil and police justice and two physicians was constituted and proceeded to inquire into the boy’s mental condition. Neither the names of the witnesses who appeared before the commission nor their testimony is incorporated in the record before us. But the “Findings and Adjudications of the Commission” recites that the members being “satisfied” “by personal examination” of the boy, and “by inquiry and examination of witnesses,” as to his “mental condition,” doth “decide” that he “is feeble-minded, or epileptic, and [105]*105ought to be confined in an institution for the feeble-minded, idiotic or epileptic.”

The record further discloses that the boy is a Negro and the illegitimate son of Mamie Robinson.

Although, as has been said, the petition which inaugurated the proceeding gave the name and local address of the mother, she was not summoned to appear before the commission. Neither was she notified of the hearing nor did she attend. Nor were any of the boy’s other “next of kin” notified of or in attendance at the hearing.

On the day on which the commission made its finding the boy was committed by the assistant civil and police justice to the custody of the city sergeant pending his admission to the State Colony for Epileptics and Feeble-Minded at Petersburg.

The petitioner insists that the provision of Code, sec. 1079, as amended, requiring the judge or justice before whom the petition is filed “to summon the custodian if any of the alleged feeble-minded person, together with the parent, guardian, or next of kin” of such person, is mandatory and jurisdictional, and that because of the failure to comply with such provision the finding of the commission and the commitment under which the petitioner is held are void.

The position of the Attorney General, that such provision is merely directory and not mandatory or jurisdictional, finds support in what was said in Mallory v. Virginia Colony for Feeble-Minded, 123 Va. 205, 96 S. E. 172. That case likewise involved the validity of the commitment of an alleged feeble-minded child.

It is conceded that the statute there involved (Acts 1916, ch. 388, p. 662) is substantially the same as Code, secs. 1078 and 1079, as amended. The statute, as then written, required the inauguration of the proceedings by the filing of a petition similar to that now required by Code, sec. 1078, as amended. Upon the filing of such petition the judge or justice was required “to issue a warrant ordering such-feeble-minded person to be brought before him and [to] [106]*106summon the persons named in the petition and such other persons as may be deemed competent to testify to the condition and circumstances of the alleged feeble-minded person.”

In that case it was held that “the statutory requirements as to procedure are jurisdictional,” and that since no such petition was filed, and no such warrant issued, the proceedings and the commitment were void.

While the opinion is not clear on the subject, it appears from the briefs filed in the case that the further contention was made that the proceedings were void because the father of the alleged feeble-minded person was not summoned or notified of the proceedings.

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39 Va. Cir. 77 (Fairfax County Circuit Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E.2d 118, 189 Va. 100, 1949 Va. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-winstead-va-1949.