White v. White

196 S.W. 508, 108 Tex. 570, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 108
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1917
DocketNo. 2858.
StatusPublished
Cited by124 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 508 (White v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. White, 196 S.W. 508, 108 Tex. 570, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 108 (Tex. 1917).

Opinion

Me. Justice HAWKIETS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Is the lunacy statute which was enacted by the Thirty-third Legislature, Acts 1913, chapter. 163, pages 341-347, amending chapter 1, title' 10, Revised Statutes, 1911, unconstitutional ?

That is the main question in this habeas corpus proceeding, in which the District Court of El Paso County, Thirty-fourth Judicial District, upheld said Act as valid, but in which our Court of Civil Appeals for the Eighth Supreme Judicial District declared it void. 183 S. W., 369.

Under the provisions of said Act, and upon the unanimous report of “six commissioners,” all of whom were physicians, and without a trial before a court or a common law or a statutory jury, defendant in error, Mrs. Lillie White, wife of plaintiff in- error, was adjudged by the county judge of El Paso County to be a lunatic, the judgment ordering that she be conveyed to one of the lunatic asylums of the State for restraint and treatment. Thereafter, under an approved statute^ bond of the husband and his sureties, it was ordered that she be delivered “into the care and custody of the said J. A. White as provided by law.”

Subsequently, her attorney filed, and presented to said District Court, her petition for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that she was being illegally restrained of her liberty and confined by the sheriff, the constable, and said J. A. White, by virtue of proceedings instituted under said Act, in said County Court, and before the county judge of El Paso County, and that said Act is null and void in that it is “violative of the provisions of the Constitution of the United States prohibiting the taking of life, liberty or property without due process of law, and violative of the provisions of the Constitution of the State of Texas guaranteeing to your petitioner that her liberty shall not be taken from her without due process of law, and guaranteeing to her the right of trial by jury, as contemplated by the framers of the Constitution.”

The writ issued. J. A. White answered, stating, in substance, that pursuant to said proceedings in lunacy, and bond, relator, his wife, was then in his custody “under reasonable restraint for the purpose of having her cared for and treated for her mental disorder and restrain her from committing injury to herself or others,” and that “she is in fact of unsound mind, and liable, if not restrained, to do herself and others great injury.”

The record sets out no answer by the sheriff or constable; however, the order denying the writ recites that they and J. A. White made due return of said writ, and as the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals states, “it developed on the habeas corpus hearing that appellant was being guarded by deputies from 'Constable Montoya’s office, Mon *575 toya having answered that he held appellant by virtue of a warrant for her arrest issued out of the Justice Court of said county.”

Upon the hearing relator was remanded to the custody of her husband; whereupon she appealed to said Court of Civil Appeals.

Therein her attorneys insisted that said Act is unconstitutional for the reasons above mentioned, and because it attempts to confer judicial power upon said commissioners, and that, therefore, appellant should be set at liberty. J. A. White there contended, first, that said Act is valid, and, second, that, even if it is unconstitutional, it was the duty of the District Court to affirm the judgment which declared respondent to be a lunatic, “as it appeared from the respondent’s answer to the writ of habeas corpus (which was not controverted or impeached), that the applicant was insane, needed restraint, and was being restrained and cared for by her husband for the protection of herself and the public.”

That court held, in substance (1) that, in their relation to jury trials, the Sixth, Seventh and Fourteenth Amendments are inapplicable; (2) that the “judicial power” of the State is not lodged in the “commission” prescribed by said Act, in such manner or extent as to render the statutory proceedings invalid as not affording “due process of law,” or “due course of the law of the land”; and (3) that the notice prescribed by said Act was sufficient; but that said Act denied the right- of “trial by jury” guaranteed by section 15, article 1, of our State Constitution, that right having previously existed. However, holding that a proper affidavit charging defendant in error with insanity had been filed, that court so modified the judgment below as to remand her to the sheriff of the county of her residence for a reasonable time, for proceedings under the old law, and, as so modified, affirmed it. A motion for a rehearing was overruled, and the husband appealed to this court.

The case presents here no issue as to the regularity of the proceedings if the statute is valid. The questions for our decision are these: (1) Is the Act valid? (2) If the Act be held void, what is the proper disposition to be made of Mrs. Lillie White?

The articles of the Eevised Statutes which the Act purports to amend relate to lunatic asylums and other asylums, and provide for restraint and care of insane persons, etc.

The following presents the most material features of said amendatory Act, some of its provisions being omitted:

Under the head of “Judicial Proceedings in Cases of Lunacy,” it provides, in substance:

Art. 150. For the institution of such proceedings byi filing an affidavit “with any county judge” or “before any justice of'the peace,” charging that the person therein named is a “lunatic,” or is “non compos mentis,” and that the welfare of such person or of others requires that such person be placed under restraint or treatment, or that such person is “a convict confined in the State penitentiary,” such. *576 affidavit, if made before a justice of the peace, to be transmitted to the county judge, and for issuance of a- writ for the apprehension of such person, returnable to the county judge, and for docketing the affidavit on the probate docket as an ex parte proceeding, naming such person as respondent.

Art. 151. For the style and address of the writ, and for service thereof by reading it to the person 'named therein and by delivering a copy thereof to such person, and also for taking him into custody, and for having him at such times and places as may be directed by the commission provided for, unless some other person shall, by bond, undertake his care and restraint and his appearance throughout such proceedings, etc.

Art. 152. For appointment by the county judge of “a commission to be composed of six persons . . . which . . . shall investigate and determine the allegations in said affidavit,” ... to be composed in whole or in part of physicians, in a stated ratio to the population of the county, except that “in any county as many of said six commissioners shall be physicians as may be possible for the county judge to obtain thereon, regardless of population.”

Art. 153. For administration to such commissioners of an oath to make due investigation into the allegations contained in said affidavit and a true report thereof. ■

Art. 154.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 508, 108 Tex. 570, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-white-tex-1917.