Warrick v. Moore County

291 S.W. 950
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 1927
DocketNo. 2765.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 950 (Warrick v. Moore County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warrick v. Moore County, 291 S.W. 950 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

The appellant presented to the district judge of the Sixty-Ninth judicial district her application for a writ of certiorari to have a judgment of the county court revised, the judgment superseded, and for a trial de novo in the district court. The judge of said district court granted the application and ordered said writ issued upon the giving of stipulated bonds. The writ was issued, served, and returned into that court. A motion to dismiss the proceeding was made -by appellees, and the district court sustained same, and dismissed the case from its docket, and ordered a writ to issue to the county court of Moore county to proceed with the judgment entered in that court. From this .action of the trial court, appellant appeals to this court.

The grounds of appellees’ motion to dismiss the certiorari proceedings were as follows:

“(1) That the application on its face shows that Mrs. Warrick was adjudged by a jury in the county court of Moore .county to be a person of unsound mind.
“(2) Proceedings in the county court declaring one to be a person of unsound min'd are not probate proceedings, or final, from which no appeal lies.
“ (3) It is made the duty of the county judge, where one has been adjudged a person of unsound mind, to appoint a guardian of the estate of such person without an application having been filed therefor. - “(4) The county judge in this case appointed J. H. Feltz as temporary guardian, which is authorized by law, and caused citation to be issued and served, returnable to the next regular term of court after said adjudication.
“(5) At said term the appointment to be made permanent 'in accordance with the law governing' such proceedings.
“(6) The district court is without jurisdiction to inquire into the regularity of the pro- • ceedings in the county court adjudging Mrs. Warrick of unsound mind.
“(7) The district court is without jurisdiction to inquire into the sufficiency of the testimony adduced on the trial, where Mrs. War-rick was declared to be of unsound mind.
“(8) Said application does not point out any error committed by the county judge in the guardianship proceedings, which would give the district court jurisdiction on certiorari to remove said appointment.
“(9) The application for certiorari was im-providentially granted, and should therefore be dismissed.”

As stated, the trial court sustained the motion and dismissed the application for cer-tiorari, and canceled all proceedings thereunder.

For a proper determination of the correctness of the trial court’s ruling on the grounds of such motion, and of the contentions of appellant, it will be necessary for us to quote at length from the petition for certiorari, as the allegations of the petition necessarily involve the action of the trial court in dismissing same.

Plaintiff, in her petition, alleges substantially:

The filing of an affidavit on February 3, 1926, by J. H. Feltz, in the county court of Moore county, in which affidavit Feltz charges that he has reason to believe and does believe that M. S. Warrick, a resident of the county of Moore, and who is temporarily in the town of Dumas, is a non compos mentis, and is without a guardian of her person or estate, and prays for such proceedings in the premises aS are provided by law. That on the same day the county judge issued her warrant to the sheriff of Moore county, commanding him to forthwith summon six residents of Moore county, who were qualified jurors, to appear before her on the same day, to serve as jurors in the trial of said M. S. Warrick upon said affidavit, and that said sheriff at said time bring before her the said M. S. Warrick. That on the said day the sheriff made his return, showing the summoning of six jurors, and also produced Mrs. Warrick. On the same day a hearing was had before the jury on the affidavit above mentioned. The trial court, on said day, appointed an attorney to represent Moore county on the hearing, there being no county attorney of Moore county. That'no attorney was appointed to represent Mrs. Warrick, nor did she have any attorney or other person to represent her on said hearing, for the reasons hereinafter shown. That only one issue was submitted to the jury, which issue is as follows: “Is the defendant, M. S. Warrick, otherwise known as Maggie S. Warrick, of sound mind? You will answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No.’ ”

That in response to said special issue the jury answered “No.” That, upon said verdict the said county judge, on the same day, entered her judgment decreeing that the said *952 M. S. Warrick “be and she is hereby duly adjudged and decreed to be of .unsound mind.” That on the same day the said county judge entered her order appointing the said J. H. Eeltz as temporary guardian of the estate of M. S. Warrick, a non compos mentis, without the necessity of the issuance of citation, but that, upon the qualification of the said guardian, the clerk of said court was ordered to issue and have served proper notice and citation thereon, as required and directed by law, returnable to the next term of said court, at which time said appointment was to be made permanent if not contested, also requiring bond in the suin of $60,000 of such temporary' guardian. That said bond was given, and the oath was taken by the said Eeltz as such temporary guardian. On the 4th day of February, 1926, such citation was issued by the county clerk. On February 19, 1926, the county judge entered an order appointing J. H. Eeltz as guardian of the estate of Mrs. Warrick upon the recitation that she had been duly and legally found to be of unsound mind. That Eeltz took the oath and gave the bond as such guardian. That all of said proceedings and all of said orders of Margaret Irvin Wall, county judge of Moore county, were and are null and Void for the following reasons:

“(a) No citation and no notice of any character whatever of the complaint made by the said J. H. Eeltz hereinbefore referred to and set out above, and no citation or notice of any character of the hearing or trial on said complaint was ever served on or given to your petitioner previous to the hearing thereof, and the order adjudging your petitioner to be of unsound mind.
“(b) That your petitioner, though produced in the courthouse on the date of said original hearing on said complaint, was not informed in any way of the nature of said proceedings, and did not know that said proceedings were for the purpose of having your petitioner declared of unsound mind, until after said order had been entered.
“(c) That, on the hearing upon said complaint, neither Moore county, nor the attorney appointed to represent Moore county, on said hearing, nor J. H. Feltz, nor any other person, made known to your petitioner that a complaint in lunacy had been filed alleging that your petitioner was non compos mentis.

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warrick-v-moore-county-texapp-1927.