Weightman's Estate

190 A. 552, 126 Pa. Super. 221, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 13, 1936
DocketAppeals, 384-386
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 190 A. 552 (Weightman's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weightman's Estate, 190 A. 552, 126 Pa. Super. 221, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

In January, 1935, William Walker Weightman, then a mental patient in Norristown State Hospital, to which he had been summarily committed in June, 1934, upon the certificate of two qualified physicians under the provisions of Section 302, Article III, of the Mental Health Act of July 11, 1923, P. L. 998, 1001, 50 PS §42, exercised the rights given him (Section 601, Article VI, P. L. 1020, as amended by the Act of April 27, 1925, P. L. 337, 50 PS §171) to communicate with counsel and to procure a writ of habeas corpus to determine whether or not he was properly detained. He retained Hon. *223 Ambler Williams, one of the appellants, as his counsel to prepare and conduct the habeas corpus proceedings in Montgomery County and through him arranged for the professional services of two expert alienists, Charles W. Burr, M. D., and Frederic H. Leavitt, M. D., the other appellants. These physicians made examinations of Weightman, appeared in court as witnesses upon several occasions, and testified that he had been restored to capacity. The common pleas of Montgomery County, however, remanded Weightman to the hospital.

On June 22, 1934, the court below had entered its decree, under the Act of May 28, 1907, P. L. 292, as amended by the Act of April 1, 1925, P. L. 101, 50 PS §941, et seq., adjudging Weightman a weak-minded person, unable to take care of his property and liable to become the victim of designing persons, and appointing Provident Trust Company and David Bortin, Esq., “guardians to take care of [his] property and estate.” No guardian of Weightman’s person was appointed nor was he committed to any institution by the court below.

When the first account of the guardians, shoAving a balance of more than $60,000 then in their hands, came on for audit and distribution on March 6, 1936, the appellants presented their respective claims for allowance out of Weightman’s estate.

The merits of these claims are not now before us because the auditing judge peremptorily refused to entertain or hear them. They were not founded upon any contract Avith Weightman, but each was based upon a quantum meruit and proof was offered in support of each. The auditing judge definitely refused to receive any evidence relative to the circumstances under which the legal and medical services of appellants had been rendered, or to the extent and value thereof. His attitude toward appellants and their claims may be illustrated by a few excerpts from the record. After Judge Williams had stated the history of the habeas *224 corpus proceedings in Montgomery County and the nature and extent of his services and those of the other appellants, the record continues: “The Court: What I want to know, Judge, is who employed these doctors. Mr. Williams: I did. The Court: Who employed you? Mr. Williams: Weightman. The Court: He cannot employ any one; he is incompetent. He was adjudicated incompetent in this court to do any business, make any contracts. That is why we appointed a guardian for him. No one can deal with him excepting at his peril. Mr. Williams: Well, here is a man who has been committed to an institution for the insane. The Court: I mean, so far as he is concerned, I suppose he imagines that he is perfectly sane and everybody else in the world is insane, and he would hire a lawyer every week to get him out. That is the very thing that was adjudicated that he could not do. You see, I am not thinking of you as a designing person, but one of the reasons why a guardian was appointed for him was that he was likely to become a victim of designing persons. It was to protect him against his own folly, and therefore any one who undertakes to represent him does so at his peril. Mr. Williams: I understand that. These claims' are not based on a contract between Weightman and myself or between Weightman and these physicians, but as a matter of fact, he was an inmate of a state institution, and he had the right to have a writ of habeas corpus allowed to test whether he should be kept confined in that institution for any further length of time. The Court: I guess he had the right, but you cannot charge his estate with anything.......Mr. Williams: He was not committed to the State Hospital by this court. The Court: That does not make any difference. This is his estate we are trying to preserve. We cannot allow a claim like that; it has no basis.......Mr. Williams: He brought the habeas corpus. The Court: *225 It is an unheard of proceeding. You cannot go up and represent this man that is weak-minded and charge him with legal services and medical services or any other kind of services. Nobody can deal with him excepting at his peril. Any one that wants to deal with him must deal through his guardian. He has a guardian. He cannot deal for himself. Mr Borton: [representing other claimants] Would your Honor look at the Act of 1923, the Health Act, which deals with that point? I think the Acts of 1923 and 1925 specifically guarantee to a man the right to a writ of habeas corpus. The Court: Who says anything about the right to a writ of habeas corpus? Certainly any one has a right to a writ of habeas corpus. You are confusing the two things. I am not saying that he has not the right to ask for a writ. He can do that morning, noon, and night. Mr. Borton: That is our position here. The Court: Your position is untenable. Mr. Williams: I am not prepared to argue this matter until after an exhaustive research, but these claims were not controverted by counsel for the accountants. If your Honor will reserve this question—The Court: No, I have decided it. It is not a valid claim. You can have an exception to my ruling and argue it at a later date.......Mr. O’Connor: I am entering my appearance for Judge Williams for his claim. I also wish to make an offer of proof of the quantum meruit. The Court: I am not saying anything about the value of the services. All I am saying is that lawyers are crazy if they represent him.”

A portion of the decree of distribution reads: “The following claims are not allowed: Dr. Burr, $250; Dr. Leavitt, $250; J. A. Williams, $250.” Appellants’ exceptions to the disallowance of their claims were dismissed by the court, in banc, and these appeals followed.

The position taken at the hearing by the learned *226 auditing judge, and reiterated and elaborated in the opinion subsequently written by him for the court below, is tantamount to a judicial declaration that under no circumstances whatsoever may attorneys or medical experts who have rendered professional services to an inmate of a mental hospital, in the course of habeas corpus proceedings instituted to secure his release, receive compensation out of the patient’s estate, unless their employment has first been approved by the court which appointed the guardians of his estate. A majority of the members of this court do not agree with this proposition. Of course, we do not mean by this statement to say that the claims of these appellants should have been allowed. Whether they should or should not be paid out of this incompetent’s estate cannot be judicially determined until all the circumstances under which the services were rendered have been established in due course of law. That has been prevented up to this time by the refusal of the auditing judge to receive the offered proofs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A. 552, 126 Pa. Super. 221, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weightmans-estate-pasuperct-1936.