Sanders v. Omohundro

166 S.W.2d 657, 204 Ark. 1040, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 287
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 14, 1942
Docket4-6905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 166 S.W.2d 657 (Sanders v. Omohundro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Omohundro, 166 S.W.2d 657, 204 Ark. 1040, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 287 (Ark. 1942).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, C. J.

The appeal is from a decree directing W. B. Sanders to comply with his written contract of April 21, 1942, to purchase ninety-one feet of land fronting west on Pulaski street in Little Rock. Sanders says he is anxious to consummate the transaction, but that Mrs. L. S. Omohundro, who agreed to supply an abstract showing a marketable title, has defaulted in that Gladys Shader, who inherited the property from her father, and in whom title is conceded to haye been good, was insane in 1939 when Mrs. Omohundro purchased from a so-called guardian.

Invalidity of the sale to Mrs. Omohnndro is based upon tbe following grounds: (a) Action of Pulaski probate court in appointing a guardian was void, and (b) tbe proceedings may be collaterally attacked, (c) Tbe guardian’s attempt to sell was ineffectual because a commissioner appointed by tbe court, as distinguished from the guardian, made the sale, and (d) the lots were exchanged for other property; also, (e) the court’s' direction to sell and its order of confirmation were within the same term, (f) Confirmation was not complete. (g) An order, nunc pro tunc, whereby it was sought to cure a defective commitment of 1914, was void.

In January, 1914, David E. Clark, who termed himself “attending physician” at St. Joseph’s Eetreat, Dearborn, Mich., addressed a letter “To whom it may concern, ’ ’ certifying that Gladys Shader was mentally ill. It was the writer’s opinion the patient was incapable of caring for her person or property. Appointment of a guardian, he said, was “necessary and essential.”

February tenth of the year in which the Clark letter was written, Mrs. Eleanor F. Shader (Gladys’ mother) petitioned Pulaski probate court for appointment as guardian, in consequence of which such designation was made in an order dated four days subsequent to the petition. Bond was executed.

May 10, 1935, complying with prayers of a petition for “clarification of the record” and an order, nunc pro tunc, the probate court entered its judgment finding that Gladys was then confined in St. Joseph’s Eetreat; that the institution was an asylum for the insane within the meaning of Act 77 of 1905, and that the patient’s mental status was such that appointment of a guardian was imperative. Gladys was found to be a resident of Pulaski county. 1

Essential difference between the judgment of 1914 and that of 1933 was that the prior judgment did not show on its facj/what is conceded to be a fact — that Gladys was a citizen of Pulaski county in 1914 and in 1935; also, the order of 1914 did not disclose the nature of the Dearborn institution.

Argument is that there was want of due process when in 1914 a judgment appointing a guardian was rendered without requiring that Gladys be brought into court. The same vice, it is said, appears in the order of 1935. Attention is directed to § 7546 of Pope’s Digest, where it is provided that if anyone shall give information in writing to the probate court that a person in the county is of unsound mind, and shall pray that an inquiry be had- the court, if satisfied there is good cause for the exercise of its jurisdiction, shall cause the person so charged to be brought before it, “and inquire into the facts by a jury, if the facts be doubtful.”

Section 7553 of the Digest directs that if it be found by the jury that the person “so brought before, the court” is of unsound mind, or incapable of managing his own affairs, a guardian shall be appointed.

Appellee, however, relies upon § 7554 of the Digest, which is § 1 of Act 77 of 1905, p. 198. The provision is that in respect of a person of unsound mind who is confined in an asylum for the insane within the state, “or in any institution or asylum for the insane outside of the state,” the probate court of the county of which such -insane person is a citizen shall have power to appoint a guardian “. . . without requiring the presence of such person before the court.” 2

Appellant’s contention is that § 7554 is constitutional only in those cases where commitment has been by appropriate proceedings after due notice, and after the subject whose rights are being dealt with has been brought before the court.

In construing § 7546 of Pope’s Digest (§ 5829 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest), it has often been held that presence of the person alleged to be insane is a prerequisite to the jurisdiction, and an order appointing a guardian must affirmatively show such fact. Monks v. Duffle, 163 Ark. 118, 259 S. W. 735.

Appellant cites Hyde v. McNeely, 193 Ark. 1139, 104 S. W. 2d 1068, where it was adjudged that the probate court of Desha county did not have jurisdiction to inquire into the sanity of a person who was not before the court. The decision, however, was in a case where the person alleged to be insane had not been committed to an institution, and § 5829 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest was applicable, as in the Monlcs-Duffle case.

In Payne v. Arkebauer, 190 Ark. 614, 80 S. W. 2d 76, the holding was that an order adjudicating a person- to be insane, such person not being before the court, was not void on its face for want of due process, even though made without notice. The reason was that the adjudication could be appealed from.

■Chief Justice McCulloch, speaking for the court in Sharum v. Meriwether, 156 Ark. 331, 246 S. W. 501, said that refusal of the probate court to inquire into the facts of insanity by a jury, if the facts be doubtful, and a finding without such inquiry, did not render the judgment void, although it was an abuse of discretion appearing on the face of the record, and such an abuse as would have invalidated the proceeding on appeal. “Jurisdiction,” says the opinion, “is acquired by the filing of information with the court and the compulsory attendance of the accused before the court, and the proceedings which follow constitute the exercise of the jurisdiction thus acquired. The ordering of a jury is done in the exercise of that jurisdiction, and it does not defeat the jurisdiction of the court because there is an erroneous exercise of it in the proceeding. The error must, as before stated, be corrected by appeal. ’ ’ 3

The second headnote to Payne v. Arkebauer as shown by the Arkansas Reports, assumes the decision held that a person charged with insanity must be present when a guardian is appointed, “but need not be present in a proceeding for commitment to State Hospital for Nervous Diseases.” In the opinion attention is called to § 5829' of 'Crawford & Moses’ Digest, taken from the Revised Statutes, and to Act 19, approved Feb. 17, 1883, the latter providing for admission of insane, persons to asylum. It was then said that each statute is complete in itself, “. . . and the Acts are for wholly different purposes.” But in another paragraph there is this language: “As we have already stated, there are two separate statutes dealing with insane persons. One is the statute to which attention has been called in the Revised Statutes. In the proceedings under this statute it is necessary to have the party present in court, but this is á proceeding for the appointment of a guardian.”

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W.2d 657, 204 Ark. 1040, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-omohundro-ark-1942.