State ex rel. Bricker v. Griffith

36 N.E.2d 489, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 95
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 1941
DocketNo 3305
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 36 N.E.2d 489 (State ex rel. Bricker v. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Bricker v. Griffith, 36 N.E.2d 489, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 95 (Ohio Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

OFINION

By HORNBECK, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a money judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.

The errors assigned are:

(1) The Court of Common Pleas erred in sustaining the demurrer to the answer of defendant "to the amended petition.

(2) The Court erred in rendering a judgment against defendant on the pleadings.

(3) The judgment rendered by the lower court is contrary to law.

Upon the averments of the amended petition and the answer thereto there arises no conflict or dispute in facts. So- that, the legal question presented in the trial court, and urged here, was and is properly raised by the demurrer to the answer of defendant to the amended petition.

• The amended petition seeks to recover for the support of defendant's ward and inmate at the Lima State Hospital, from June 30, 1922, to July 10, 1925, 158.weeks at $3.50 per week, $553.00, and from July 10, 1925, to November 15, 1936, 592-2/7 weeks at $5.50 per week, $3257.57; in all, the sum of $3810.57.

■ The undisputed facts are that Fred E. Griffith on February 3, 1920, was in* dieted by a grand jury In Clinton Coun[96]*96ty, Ohio, under case No. 3358, Court of Common Pleas, Clinton County, Ohio. The criminal offense charged does not appear and it is not material. Thereafter, on the 10th day of February, 1920, a jury in the aforesaid court returned a verdict finding that the defendant was insane and on the 11th day of February, 1920, a judge of said court ordered said Fred E. Griffith to be committed to the Lima State Hospital and, thereafter, Griffith was conveyed to said hospital and was an inmate therein under the aforesaid commitment during all of the period covered by the claims set forth in the amended petition.

The answer of the defendant, after setting up the above facts, denies any liability to the plaintiff for the reason that during the period covered by the claim of the plaintiff in the amended petition Griffith was a prisoner in said Lima State Hospital under. the legal custody of the Common Pleas Court of Clinton, County, Ohio.

It is the claim of the plaintiff that Fred Griffith was a patient in a State Hospital for the insane, within the purview of §1815-1 GC,. and is, therefore, amenable to the pay patient law as set up in §1815 GC et seq. The court sustained the demurrer to the answer and judgment was. entered for the plaintiff in the amount prayed for in the amended petition.

The appeal challenges the correctness of this adjudication.

Our labors have been lightened by the assistance of counsel by comprehensive and complete briefs and we have been-favored with two opinions of Judge Leach in the Common Pleas Court.

At the outset it will be helpful to examine and analyze the language of §1815-1 GC, effective when Griffith was committed, which provides:

“When any - person is committed to a state hospital for the insane, to the Longview Hospital, to the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics, or to the Institution for Feeble-Minded, the judge making such commitment shall at the same time certify to the superintendent of such institution, and the superintendent shall thereupon enter upon his records the name and address of the guardian, if any appointed, and of the relative or relatives liable for such person’s support under §1815-9.”

It will be noted that Lima State Hospital is not mentioned by name in the section and if included it must be by the general term “a state hospital for the insane”. This section was enacted March 30, 1911, 102 O. L. 63, after the erection of Lima State Hospital, which was subsequent to 1906 when the act creating the hospital was enacted.

There would seem to be no doubt that Griffith was committed to the Lima State Hospital; that it is a hospital for the insane, and that it is a state hospital. It is characterized in the law as a state hospital and the sole and only purpose of its creation was to provide hospitalization for the insane. Of course, it was instituted to take care of certain classes of insane, as set forth in §1985 GC, 98 Ohio Laws 236, ¶2,

“The Lima State Hospital shall be used for the custody, care and special treatment of insane persons of the following classes:
(1) Persons who become insane while in the state reformatory or penitentiary.
(2) Dangerous insane persons in other state hospitals.
(3) Persons accused of crime, but not indicted because of insanity.
(4) Persons indicted, but found to. be insane.
(5) Persons acquitted because of insanity.
(6) Persons adjudged to be insane who wére previously convicted of crime.
(7) , Such other insane persons as may be directed by law.”

It appears that Griffith would come under the 4th subheading of the section, namely, a person indicted, but found to be insane, and when committed to' that hospital all of its uses would be brought into play, namely, custody, [97]*97care and special treatment of an insane person.

The word “custody” as employed in §1985 GC is stressed by the appellant as tending to support the claim that Griffith was a prisoner in Lima State Hospital. Although the word “custody” is not mentioned in defining the purposes of hospitals for the insane as' carried in original §1947- GC, it is common knowledge that one of. the most salient purposes of such institutions is custodial. Hospitals for the insane ¡other than the Lima State Hospital carry on in every particular the uses and purposes for which Lima State Hospital was created, namely, the custody, care and special treatment of insane persons, the only distinction being that the inmates of Lima are, in the main, of certain classes of insane persons, although it may be noted that under (7) of §1985 GC, others than those mentioned in the first six sub-paragraphs might be committed there.

We are cited to several definitions of the word “custody”, one of which is from Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, (Rawle’s Revision), “The detainer of a person by virtue of .a lawful authority, * * custody has been held to be nothing-less than actual imprisonment.” In the broad concept of imprisonment it would indeed be difficult to distinguish the state of inmates of hospitals for the insane and inmates of certain other state hospitals and penal .institutions. The test to be made here is not so broad but is whether or not Griffith, as an inmate of Lima State Hospital, under commitment from the Common Pleas Court of Clinton. County was there under- restraint of the law because of his indictment for the comr mission of a criminal offense or because of his insanity.

In our judgment he clearly was in Lima State Hospital .by virtue of the determination of a duly constituted body, namely, the jury in Common Pleas Court, that he was’ an insane person. Having been so adjudged by virture of §1985 GC, sub-paragraph 4, he was committed,, as an insane person, to the Lima State Hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.E.2d 489, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bricker-v-griffith-ohioctapp-1941.