State Commission in Lunacy v. Eldridge

94 P. 597, 7 Cal. App. 298, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 247
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 3, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 409.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 94 P. 597 (State Commission in Lunacy v. Eldridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Commission in Lunacy v. Eldridge, 94 P. 597, 7 Cal. App. 298, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 247 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinions

HART, J.

This action was commenced by the plaintiff on the thirteenth day of November, 1905, for the recovery of the sum of $2,370, alleged to be due from the defendant, by virtue of the provisions of section 2176 of the Political Code, for the care, support and maintenance of the latter’s adult son, who was, the complaint alleges, at the age of thirty-four years, duly committed, on the thirteenth day of September, 1892, to the State Insane Asylum at Stockton. The trial resulted in a judgment for the defendant, and this appeal is from the order denying plaintiff a new trial.

There are only two questions presented and discussed by counsel. The first is as to the ruling of the court, upon the objection of respondent, excluding as evidence the commitment upon which the patient, E. E. Eldridge, is held in custody by the superintendent of the State Hospital for the Insane at Stockton. The second involves an attack upon the constitutional validity of section 2176 of the Political Code, imposing upon certain designated relatives the liability for the support and maintenance “of any insane person in a state hospital for the insane to which he has been or may hereafter be committed or transferred. ’ ’

The answer, among other things, sets up the statute of limitations—section 338, subdivision 1, of the Code of Civil Procedure—in bar of plaintiff’s action. With reference to the special plea, counsel for the plaintiff admitted at the trial “that defendant’s plea of the statute of limitations is good and valid for all but three years prior to the commencement of the action, and appellant waived judgment for any amount accruing prior to that time.”

The medical superintendent of the Stockton State Hospital, Dr. Asa Clark, was called as a witness by plaintiff, and, after testifying that E. E. Eldridge had been an inmate of the hospital since 1892, “living there under the care of the institution and under my charge as medical superintendent during all of that time,” he was shown the document purporting to be the commitment under the authority of which the patient was detained. Dr. Clark identified the document and stated *301 that it constituted his authority for the custody of said Eldridge ; whereupon counsel for plaintiff offered it in evidence and the offer was rejected by the court under objection by the defendant. Thus the first question was raised and is here presented.

The document which the court refused to admit in evidence consisted of an affidavit by one C. A. Eldridge, alleging the insanity of E. E. Eldridge, the medical examination of the doctors appointed by the court as the lunacy commission, and the order of commitment by the court. Said order, which follows the affidavit, reads as follows:

“E. E. Eldridge, the person named in the foregoing affidavit, being this day brought before me, Judge of the Superior Court, County of San Joaquin, for examination on a charge of insanity and having heard the testimony of C. A. Eldridge and Mrs. E. E. Eldridge, witnesses who have been acquainted with the accused during the time of the alleged insanity; and also the testimony of the examining physicians, and being myself satisfied after a personal examination that the said E. E. Eldridge is insane and is so far disordered in mind as to endanger health, person or property; and is not a case of idiocy, imbecility, dementia, or any class of incurable and harmless insanity, nor a case of delirium tremens; and being further satisfied of the truth of all the matters set forth in said physicians’ certificate, I do hereby order him to be confined in the State Insane Asylum at Stockton.
“I do hereby charge the Sheriff of San Joaquin County with the execution of this order.
“And I certify that the sum of........dollars was found on the person of said patient at the time of h____ arrest, which said........is ordered to deliver to the Chief Medical Officer of said Asylum.
“Witness my hand, this 13th day of Sept. 1892.
“ANSEL SMITH, “Judge of Superior Court.”

The opposition to the introduction of said commitment and the proceedings leading thereto was upon the ground that the same failed to show that the patient had been “duly committed,” or not committed according to the requirements of the statute. In support of this position it was insisted at the trial and here contended that it does not appear from the pro *302 eeedings before the court resulting in the commitment of the patient that the alleged incompetent was served with a warrant of arrest or given the requisite notice of the charge upon which he was to be examined. Therefore, it is urged, the proffered evidence was properly excluded because it does not show that the patient had been ‘‘ duly’ ’ committed—that is, committed in the manner required by the provisions of the lunacy law. To sustain their contention upon this point counsel for respondent cite the cases of In re Lambert, 134 Cal. 630, [86 Am. St. Rep. 296, 66 Pac. 851], McGee v. Hayes, 127 Cal. 336, [78 Am. St. Rep. 57, 59 Pac. 767], and Bedell v. Scott, 126 Cal. 675, [59 Pac. 210].

We are of the opinion that the refusal of the court to allow the evidence, as offered by appellant, of the proceedings and of the order of commitment following therefrom upon which the alleged incompetent was and is held in custody as an insane inmate of the state hospital constituted error, and, if error, it is obviously highly prejudicial, because the excluded evidence was of the very essence and the foundation of plaintiff’s cause of action. It may be conceded that the power of the superior courts to examine or try and commit insane persons to the hospitals for the insane, maintained by the state, is derivable alone from legislative enactments, and not from the constitution, and, while the jurisdiction over such cases is special, we are not prepared to accept the doctrine that it is so limited as to deprive proceedings had under the exercise of such power of the presumption of their regularity, particularly where they are not under direct attack. There is language in the ease of In re Lambert, supra, apparently justifying the contention that there can be indulged no presumption in favor of the validity of the proceedings authorized for the purpose of an inquisition into a charge of insanity against a person, and that, consequently, every material fact requisite to give the court jurisdiction to hear and determine the issue in such case “shall be set forth in the document by virtue of which the person is to be deprived of his liberty or estate.” But if the language referred to in that case may be subject to an interpretation agreeably to the contention of counsel for respondent, we think it is virtually overruled by a later expression of the supreme court to be found in the case of Ex parte Clary, 149 Cal. 732, [87 Pac. 580]. In that case, *303 discussing the requisites of a valid commitment under our insanity law, Associate Justice Shaw, speaking .for the court, says: “ . . .

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Bluebook (online)
94 P. 597, 7 Cal. App. 298, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-commission-in-lunacy-v-eldridge-calctapp-1908.