Small v. Champeny

78 N.W. 407, 102 Wis. 61, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 23
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 78 N.W. 407 (Small v. Champeny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Small v. Champeny, 78 N.W. 407, 102 Wis. 61, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 23 (Wis. 1899).

Opinion

Marshall, J.

The right of plaintiff to recover depended on whether the deceased, William Champeny, was competent to transact his business at the time he parted with the property in controversy to the defendant. About four and one-half months after the transaction, there was an inquest before the county judge as to Champeny’s mental condition. Such inquest was had on an application for the appointment of a guardian. As a part of the proceedings, Champeny’s testimony was taken, and among other things he testified at length as to his business relations with the defendant, particularly in regard to the property in controversy in this case. The result of the inquest was that Champeny was adjudged incompetent to attend to his business affairs, and a guardian for him was accordingly appointed. The evidence of Champeny on the hearing and the adjudication which followed were, against defendant’s objections, admitted as evidence for plaintiff on the trial in question, and that is assigned as error on this appeal.

The general rule is, that an adjudication as to mental soundness is direct evidence of the fact at the time of the adjudication, and presumptive evidence of the condition of the subject at a subsequent time, upon the theory that a condition of mind once shown to exist is presumed to continue. It is not evidence of itself of the mental soundness of the subject at any time prior to the adjudication. In the absence of independent evidence showing that the same condition of mind existed at the prior time as at the time of the adjudication and had been continuous in the meantime, it is not admissible at all in a controversy as to such condition [64]*64.at such prior time. That is the state of the law as laid down in previous adjudications of this court, and no reason, is perceived for departing from it. Such is the law also according to standard text writers and courts generally.

It is often said, as in Burnham v. Mitchell, 34 Wis. 117, that an adjudication of insanity is not evidence of the condition of the person to whom it relates prior to its date. That is perfectly consistent with what has been said. True, it is said in Giles v. Hodge, 74 Wis. 360, that the result of the adjudication in Burnham v. Mitchell was introduced to prove mental capacity reaching back many years, but the court did not say, certainly did not intend to say, that such evidence was proper per se. The admission of the evidence there was held not prejudicial because the court, by the charge, expressly limited its effect to the time when the adjudication was made. The evidence was likewise limited in Giles v. Hodge, the court saying, in substance, that the adjudication, though some days after the filing of the petition, was expressly of the date of the petition, and on such date the deeds were made, the validity of which was challenged because of the incompetency of Giles to make them. The court said there is no doubt of the general principle that the adjudication cannot relate back to a prior time as evidence of incapacity, hut when it is shown that the mental condition had been the same for a considerable length of time and was the same at the time of the act to be affected by it as when the adjudication was had, the adjudication is competent evidence. Although that was not strictly necessary to the decision of the case, because, as indicated, the court held that the adjudication, by its terms, included the very day on which the act affected by the alleged insanity took place, yet on the theory of the party challenging the competency of the adjudication as evidence, that is, that the transaction which was the subject of controversy took place a few days prior to such adjudication, the admissibility of it in connection [65]*65with other evidence was a proper subject for discussion and decision. .So what was said in that line must be considered the correct rule of law according to the deliberate judgment of this court then expressed, till some contra declaration shall have been made, and no reason is perceived now for departing from that rule. As before stated, however, that does not militate at all against the principle that such an adjudication, of itself, is not evidence of the condition of the party affected by it at any prior time. It tends that way only when the condition of the person is shown to have been the same for a considerable period of time, including the prior date and the adjudication. Then a decree of mental incompetency at one date during the period is evidence tending to show that the circumstances which indicated insanity at one time indicated the same at other times during such period. That appeals to our reason and common sense as to what ought to be the law, and the decisions of courts elsewhere support it, as indicated in the citations found in the opinion in Giles v. Hodge, supra.

In Ashcraft v. De Armond, 44 Iowa, 229, the mental condition of the subject was shown for a period of many years, reaching to a time long after the act claimed to have been affected by it, all tending to show gradual mental decay, reaching, finally, totaL inability for mental action. Under those circumstances the court held that evidence of the mental condition after the act complained of, in connection with all the other evidence on the subject, was proper. Again, in Terry v. Buffington, 11 Ga. 342, the act called in question was the making of a will in 1844. Evidence was produced tending to show that the testator’s mental condition was the same before that time and continuously down to 1849. In that state of the case expert evidence was held proper to show that the testator was incompetent at the latter date, 1849. “ Per sef said the court, “ the proof was objectionable; taken in connection with the other evidence [66]*66it was relevant and proper.” Keeping in mind the distinction between an adjudication of mental unsoundness as evidence, unsupported by evidence of prior mental condition, where that is the real'subject of controversy, and such evidence in connection with other evidence showing that the prior condition and appearances of mental unsoundness were the same as at the time of the adjudication, it will readily be seen that all the cases holding that such an adjudication is not evidence of mental condition at a prior time are in perfect harmony with the rule we say was announced by this court in Giles v. Hodge, and which is now affirmed. But, as said in Terry v. Buffington, the converse of the rule that insanity once judicially established is presumed to continue, is not the law. That is, it does not relate back as well as continue. In the language very properly used by the learned counsel for appellant on the argument, the presumption springing from the adjudication is not retroactive.

In view of what has preceded, it must be held that the admission in evidence of the adjudication made over four months, after the act sought to be impeached, was error. There was no competent proof, as appears, warranting the finding that Champeny was in substantially the same condition of mind continuously from before the transfer of the property to defendant, down to the time he was placed under guardianship. That being the necessary foundation for the admission of the adjudication, and it being absent, the error of the trial court is clear. We shall not take time to go through the evidence in detail to demonstrate want of the necessary preliminary proof, but rest the matter with stating our conclusion that it is not in the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 N.W. 407, 102 Wis. 61, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-champeny-wis-1899.