Smith v. Smith
Smith v. Smith
Opinion of the Court
The exceptions to the charge were taken in time when set out in appellants’ statement of case on appeal
We find no error in the charge in the particulars excepted to. There are many precedents to support it. It is true that, ordinarily, if insanity is found to exist, it is presumed to continue till the opposite is shown. State v. Vann, 82 N. C., 631. But here the main contention in the action being as to the mental capacity of Larkin Smith, the preliminary action of the Clerk in appointing next friends to conduct the proceeding is not such a finding as to change the burden of proof and prejudge the very question at is=ue
While there is no specific exception to the judgment, any error therein which is apparent upon the face of the record the Court will take notice of and correct. Thornton v. Brady, 100 N. C., 38. The next friends are not parties to tlae action. Mason v. McCormick, 75 N. C., 263; George v. High, 85 N. C., 113; Tate v. Mott, 96 N. C., 19. They are appointed by the Court to act for and represent the real party in interest. The verdict and judgment having settled that Larkin Smith was compos mentis, the order appointing next friends was properly set aside. He then could have continued the action as to so much of it as asked to set aside the prior power of attorney to defendant, or have discontinued it. He elected to do the latter. The costs of the proceedings instituted in his behalf, and by order of the Court, should, prima facie, be taxed against him. It is to be presumed that the order of the Court appointing next friends was made regularly, after due inquiry, and in the interest of Larkin Smith. He is the party plaintiff, in fact and in law, and appeared by next friends, who merely represented him, under the authority and appointment of the Court. The Code, § 180. It is
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: This action was brought by the plaintiff Larkin Smith, non compos mentis, as alleged, appearing by his next friends named in the summons and the record, who were appointed by the Court as such, and directed, by the order appointing them, to bring the action to recover possession of certain property of the plaintiff in the possession of the defendant, to have a power of attorney executed to the latter by the plaintiff in respect to such property “ delivered up and cancelled,” and for relief specified and demanded pending the action, etc.
In the course of the action, counsel other than those who appeared for the plaintiff brought his action and conducted the same at the instance of the plaintiff, through his said next friends, appeared in Court and exhibited a power of attorney purporting to be executed by the plaintiff to them, empowering and authorizing them to dismiss the action, and they accordingly moved to dismiss the same. The said next friends resisted this motion upon “the ground that when the said power of attorney.was executed, to-wit, on the 26th day of February, 1889, the said Larkin Smith (the plaintiff) was incompetent, mentally, to execute the said power of attorney.”
The Court, before disposing of the motion to dismiss the action, at October Term, of 1890, submitted this issue to a jury: “Was Larkin Smith incompetent by reason of mental incapacity to execute a good and valid power of attorney on
It was admitted on the trial of this issue that the plaintiff had been paralyzed before the execution of the power of attorney in question, on the right side, which partly deprived him of speech and rendered him unable to walk. Numerous witnesses were examined on the trial. Among other instructions, the Court gave the jury the following: “His Honor further charged the jury that the law presumes every man to be of sound mind, and the burden of proof was upon the plaintiffs to show the contrary, and this must be shown by a preponderance of the evidence.” To this the appellants excepted.
The Court granted the motion to dismiss the action, and gave judgment against the said next friends of the plaintiff in favor of the latter and the defendants for the costs of the action. Whereupon such next friends appealed to this Court. Granting that the Court properly instructed the jury “that the law presumes every man to be of sound mind,” I am of opinion that it erroneously instructed them further in that connection that “the burden of proof was upon the plaintiffs (meaniüg the next friends of the plaintiff in this action, the present appellants) to show the contrary; ” because, in this very action, the Court itself in the proper exercise of its authority for the purposes of the action had adjudged that the plaintiff wTas non compos mentis, had appointed such next friends to be such, and authorized them to bring the action, as it might do.
A lunatic, or person non compos mentis, may bring his action in a case like this, and the statute (The Code, §180) provides that, in the absence of a guardian, he may appear by his next friend. This statutory provision is serious, and, in proper -cases, must be observed in some orderly effective way. Summary application by petition or motion in writing, stating the material facts upon which such application is
In this case, application by petition was made to the Court to appoint a next friend. It was alleged in the petition that the plaintiff was non compos mentis and unable to take care of his property; that his large property was in possession of defendant, who was wasting and destroying the same, etc. The Court thereupon declared that it appeared that the plaintiff was “incompetent to defend his possessions from injury”; that it was necessary to bring suit,” etc.; and appointed appellants to be the next friends of the plaintiff, and authorized them to bring the action. The order thus made was not a mere matter of form; it wTas important and significant, and was based upon a finding of the Court, for the purposes of the action at least, that the plaintiff was then ñon compos mentis. It was certainly, in effect, so adjudged.
At any time in the course of the action it was competent for the plaintiff, or some person in his behalf, upon affidavit, to suggest that he had become sane since the action begun, and acting upon such suggestion the Court might at once institute an inquiry into the state of plaintiff’s mind and capacity to do business and manage his own affairs, as the same might come within the compass of the action. This inquiry should be made summarily, but seriously and carefully, in the action by the Court, and if it should be satisfied of the restoration of the plaintiff to sufficient mental capacity to have charge of the action, then it should discharge the next friend and leave him to prosecute the same, or dismiss it, as he might deem proper. Such inquiry should not be confined to the ascertainment of the plaintiff’s mental state at a particular time, or to the time when he executed a power of attorney empowering and authorizing cor 'sel to dismiss his action, but it should extend to his ge erai mental capacity to do and manage his businc-^.- affa ,, and particularly at
The motion of counsel to dismiss the action was, in effect, a motion to discharge the next friend of the plaintiff and allow him to dismiss his action. It was competent to make such motion in a proper way, and the Court might entertain it, and itself inquire into the mental condition of the plaintiff as above pointed out. The inquiry should have been made by the Court. It was its province and duty to find the facts. The issue submitted to the jury was not raised by the pleadings or the motion. It had reference to the ascertainment of facts, not necessarily by the jury, but by the Court. The latter, ex mero motu, submitted the issue for the purpose of aiding it in ascertaining material facts necessary to enable it to dispose of the motion to dismiss the action pending before it. It was sole judge of the extent it would require the aid of the jury or the compass of the inquiry embraced by the issue. It may be, it seems, that the inquiry should have extended to the mental condition of the plaintiff from the time specified in the issue up to the time the latter was submitted, but no question in that respect was raised. As I have said, it was the province of the Court itself to ascertain the material facts, but it might require the aid of the jury. It was not, however, in such case at all bound by the jury’s findings of fact. It was the duty of
Clearly, in my judgment, such burden was not on the appellants. The Court, in the inception of the action and in connection with it, had decided that the plaintiff was non compos mentis. When, afterwards, in its course, it was suggested to the Court that the plaintiff was compos mentis, was always so, or had become so, as might be done, surely the Court would not stultify itself by simply ignoring its own solemn decision in which it had before adjudged that the plaintiff was non compos mentis. That adjudication was presumed to be correct, well founded and effectual, until he or they who suggested the co trary should prove the sanity of the plaintiff; the burden was upon them and not upon the appellants to make such proof. The adjudication was pertinent and remained of full force until some person, in a proper way, should take upon himself the burden of showing that it had been improvidently made, or was incautious, or that the plaintiff had become sane. When it was ascertained that the plaintiff was non compos mentis, he was presumed to continue to be so until the contrary should be shown.
Strictly, there were no parties to the motion, and the Court could deal with persons only as they put themselves in relation with it, and insisted that it should be allowed or disallowed. When, in such case, persons so come before the Court in the action, they thereby submit themselves to its jurisdiction for proper and pertinent purposes, and if the Court should erroneously adjudge that one or some of them pay costs, or the like, an appeal would lie in favor of the complaining party, and hence this appeal may be entertained by this Court. I may add that while, in such a case, the Court might tax parties interfering with, and as to the motion, with the costs of the same, I cannot see upon what ground the Court gave judgment against the appellants for the costs of the action. They were not parties to the action; they were the next friends of the plaintiff, and the latter was entirely solvent and able to pay the costs chargeable against him; nor was it suggested, nor did it appear, that they were chargeable with neglect or bad faith in any respect. It may be that, in some possible view of such a case, the next friend might be taxed with and required to pay costs, but it seems to me that ordinarily, in cases like this, they are not so chargeable.
Per Owriam. Remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LARKIN SMITH, by his next friend v. CHARLES H. SMITH
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- 7 cases
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- Published