Citation Numbers: 89 N.J. Eq. 159, 104 A. 201, 1918 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 23
Judges: Ordinary, Walker
Filed Date: 2/15/1918
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
This is an appeal from an order of the Union county orphans court appointing Robert H. McAdams, Esquire, guardian of Catherine Morrisey, a lunatic.
Catherine Morrisey having been adjudged a lunatic under a commission in the nature of a writ de lunático inquirendo issued out of the court of chancery, a transcript of the proceedings in that court was duly filed in the Union county orphans court, which court, by order, duty appointed Robert H. McAdams, Esquire, who is the present clerk in chancerjq guardian of the lunatic. There was a contest over the guardianship in the orphans court between relatives of the lunatic. Certain of them filed a petition praying for the appointment of a guardian other than Mr. McAdams, upon grounds set forth in the petition. The salient ones being that Mr. McAdams had been attorney for the lunatic for a number of years, and had been active in keeping the petitioners away from her and keeping them ignor- • ant as to her mental condition, and, also because, on the hearing under the commission, Mr. McAdams appeared with Mr. WolfsKeil and consulted and conferred with him during the progress of the proceedings; and they invoke rule 35 of the court of chancery,-which provides that the clerk of the court shall not practice either as a solicitor or as a counselor in the court, as a reason why Mr. McAdams’ appointment should be reversed.
Counsel for the relatives who objected to the appointment of Mr. McAdams asked leave to take depositions in this court to show that Mr. McAdams was active at the counsel table at the hearing before the commissioners and jury. This I denied, not only because the matter of taking testimony in this court on appeal is discretionary with the ordinary, but also because counsel admitted, as above stated, that Mr. McAdams had not addressed the commission or the jury or examined and witnesses, and, of course, the record discloses that he was not the solicitor of the petitioners, As I remarked before, the only thing he did was what anyone possessed of facts bearing upon the case was privileged to do, namely, assist counsel in developing the case.
The appellants placed reliance on the ease of Read v. Drake, 2 N. J. Eq. 78. It was there decided that under the act of 1820 (Rev. 1820 p. 784) the mother or next of kin were given a preference and were entitled, if they desired it, to the appointment of guardian of minors under fourteen years of age, and could not be passed by except upon some satisfactory objection made and sustained before the court. That case has no application to the one at bar. That involved the appointment of a statutory guardian for an infant. This case involves the appointment of a statutory guardian for an insane person. The pro