Supreme
Court of Canada
Wright
v. Wright, [1951] S.C.R. 728
Date:
1951-06-20
Douglas
G.H. Wright (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Laura May
Wright and Guaranty Trust Company of Canada (Defendants) Respondents.
1951: June 5, 6, 7, 8, 20.
Present: Kerwin,
Taschereau, Kellock, Estey and Cartwright JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR ONTARIO.
Mental Incompetency,
jurisdiction to dispense with notice to alleged incompetent—Evidence required to
establish incompetency and to support order for maintenance of dependents—The Mental Incompetency
Act, R.S.O.1937, c. 110, s. 5.
The respondent Laura May
Wright, wife of the appellant, made an application under The Mental
Incompetency Act to Barlow J. in chambers for an order declaring the
appellant a mentally incompetent person, appointing a committee of his person
and estate, and dispensing with service upon the appellant of the Notice of
Motion and supporting affidavits. Barlow J. having found that personal service
would be harmful to the appellant, dispensed with service upon him, declared
him mentally incompetent, and referred the matter to the Master to appoint a
committee, and to propound a scheme for the care and maintenance of the
appellant and the management of his person and estate. The Master made a report
whereby the respondent wife was appointed committee of the person, and the
respondent trust company and herself committee of the estate and whereby he
directed payment out of the estate of annual payments of $10,000 and $4,500 for
the support and maintenance of the respondent wife and her invalid mother
respectively. This report was confirmed by Barlow J.
Appeals taken from each of
the Orders of Barlow J. were dismissed by the Court of Appeal.
Held: (Cartwright J. dissenting),
that there was jurisdiction in Barlow J. to dispense with service upon the
appellant of the Notice of Motion and supporting affidavits and, sufficient
evidence to warrant the finding of mental incompetency.
Re Brathwaite 47 E.R. 1104; Re Newman 2
Ch. Ch. 390; Re Webb 12 O.L.R. 194.
Held: (Kerwin J. dissenting),
that on the basis of the only evidence which the Master had before him the
allowances granted to the appellant’s
wife and mother-in-law were excessive and the matter should be remitted to him
for reconsideration.
Per: Cartwright J., dissenting,—Since the enactment of The
Lunacy Act, 9 Ed. VII c. 37, power to dispense with service, if it exists,
must be found in The Mental Incompetency Act, The Judicature Act, or in
the rules made under one of such Acts, and since no express provision can be
found in either Act, nor in any of the rules to which reference
[Page 729]
was made by ‘counsel, it must be
concluded that service of notice in such a case is imperatively required. If
the Court had jurisdiction to dispense with service, the matter before it was
insufficient to warrant the making of either an Order dispensing therewith or
an Order of mental incompetency.
APPEAL by special leave
from the judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario dismissing appeals from
the orders of Barlow J. of December 8 and 22, 1950.
Lewis Duncan K.C. for the appellant.
J.L. McLennan K.C. and R.D.
Poupore for Laura May Wright, respondent.
T.M. Mungovan K.C. for
Guaranty Trust Co. of Canada, respondent.
KERWIN
J. (dissenting in part):—Leave was granted by this
Court to Douglas G.H. Wright to appeal from the judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario dismissing his appeal from the orders of Barlow J. of December 8
and 22, 1950. The first order intituled “In the Matter of The Mental
Incompetency Act, being Chapter 110 of The Revised Statutes of Ontario, 1937,
and In The Matter of Douglas Guy Hobson Wright, a supposed mentally incompetent
person”, was made upon the
application of his wife and was based upon an affidavit made by her, one by Dr.
Spence, and another by Dr. Boyer. After reciting, “it appearing that personal service of
the notice of motion herein upon the said Douglas Guy Hobson Wright would be
harmful to him”, service upon him was dispensed
with and it was declared that he, presently an inmate of Homewood Sanitarium,
Guelph, Ontario, was a mentally incompetent person. It was referred to the
Master to appoint a committee or committees of his person and estate, the
Master was directed to propound and report a scheme for his maintenance and the
management of his estate, and the order contained the other usual provisions.
The order of December 22, 1950, confirmed the report of the Master dated
December 14, by which Mrs. Wright had been appointed the committee of her
husband’s person, and Guaranty
Trust Company of Canada and she had been appointed committee of the estate, the
Trust Company being the
[Page 730]
accounting
member of the committee and having the custody of the securities and cash. This
order and report will be adverted to later.
The
order of December 8 dispensing with service of the notice of motion and the
accompanying affidavits and declaring the appellant a mentally incompetent
person, is challenged on several grounds. We understand that substantially the
same objections were raised in the Court of Appeal, although, since counsel for
the appellant changed his position before us from time to time as to the
meaning and effect of some of the rules of practice of the Supreme Court of
Ontario under the Judicature Acts, it may be that the argument before the Court
of Appeal did not take the same course as that followed here. There is nothing
to prevent counsel changing his submissions on questions of law if no prejudice
be caused, and the matter is mentioned merely in order to stress the fact that
the appellant was unable to convince the Court of Appeal by anything that was
there said. Laidlaw J.A., speaking for the Court, put it thus:—
Counsel
for the appellant has failed to satisfy us in respect of any grounds upon which
he brings these proceedings before the Court. There was ample evidence before
the learned Judge to support the order in appeal. The proceedings before the
learned Judge were regular, and he properly exercised the powers given to him
by section 5 of The Mental Incompetency Act. We can find no error
in the proceedings nor in the order. The appeal should be dismissed.
Reliance
was placed upon that provision of Magna Carta appearing in section 2 of An
Act respecting Certain Rights and Liberties of the People, R.S.O. 1897, chapter
322, and which Act is now inserted in Appendix A to R.S.O. 1950, at page 1 of
Vol. 5, and specifically upon the words:—
No
man shall be taken or imprisoned nor prejudged of life or limb, nor be
disseized or put out of his freehold, franchises, or liberties, or free
customs, nor be outlawed, or exiled, or any otherwise destroyed, unless he be
brought in to answer.
This
must mean in accordance with the law as is indicated by the succeeding words:—“and prejudged of the same
by due course of law”. The position of lunatics
was dealt with at common law in an entirely different manner from any other
subject and since the former law and practice of
[Page 731]
inquest
of office has been entirely superseded in Ontario, it is sufficient to refer to
the history of the matter without detailing it.
The
Legislature of Upper Canada in 1792 enacted that in all matters of controversy
relating to property and civil rights, resort should be had to the laws of
England. By section 5 of chapter 61 of the 1857 Statutes of Canada,
it was provided that the Court might on sufficient evidence declare a person a
lunatic without the delay or expense of issuing a commission, except in case of
reasonable doubt. Chapter 65 of R.S.O. 1897, provided for an inquiry by
commission, and an inquiry without commission, with, or without, the aid of a
jury, and for the right of the alleged lunatic to demand that such latter
inquiry be submitted to a jury. Rule 334 of the 1897 Rules of Practice of the
Supreme Court of Ontario under The Judicature Act provided:—
334.
Where it appears, upon the hearing of any matter, that by reason of absence, or
for any other sufficient cause, the service of notice of the application, or of
the appointment, cannot be made, or ought to be dispensed with, such service
may be dispensed with, or any substituted service, or notice, by advertisement
or otherwise may be ordered.
Down to
1909, the practice in Upper Canada and Ontario was uniform to dispense with
service of notice of motion for a commission or a declaration where such
service would be dangerous or harmful to the alleged lunatic: In Re Patton; In Re Newman; In Re Mein; In Re Webb. The Lunacy Act, chapter
37 of the Statutes of 1909, repealed prior Acts dealing with the same subject,
and subsection 1 of section 36 enacted:—
36(1)
The Supreme Court may make rules for carrying this Act into effect and for
regulating the costs in relation thereto and except where inconsistent with the
provisions of this Act, or such rules, The Judicature Act and Rules made
thereunder shall apply to proceedings under this Act.
The
rules were next revised in 1913 and Rule 334 was omitted. In the same revision,
Rule 213 provided:—
213.
Any application in an action or proceeding shall be made by motion, and notice
of the motion shall be given to all parties affected by the order sought.
[Page 732]
In the
1928 revision of the rules, No. 213 was amended so as to read as follows:—
213.
Any application in an action or proceeding shall be made by motion, and
unless the nature of the application or the circumstances of the case render it
impracticable notice of the motion shall be given to all parties affected
by the order sought.
The
decision of Mr. Justice Britton in Re Morrison while made after the
Lunacy Act of 1909, was given before the new Consolidation of the Rules, 1928.
Furthermore, the application there made was refused on several grounds and it
is the only reported case where any intimation is given that even at that time
there was no power to order that service upon the individual of the notice of
motion to declare him incompetent should be dispensed with. Counsel for the
appellant did not deny that such a power has been exercised for many years at
Osgoode Hall.
The
actual decision in In re McLaughlin, does not assist in the
disposition of the present appeal but it is important to note what is said by
Lord Davey, speaking for the Judicial Committe, at page 347:—
It
must be remembered that this particular jurisdiction is one of some peculiarity
and difficulty. It exists for the benefit of the lunatic, and the guiding
principle of the whole jurisdiction is what is most for the benefit of the
unhappy subject of the application.
This
shows that the question of lunacy or mental incompetency has always occupied a
separate position and, viewing the present rules of practice in the light of
that underlying proposition, Rule 213, as it now reads, is on its proper
construction applicable to such an application as was made here and is not
confined to applications in an action or a proceeding already commenced. In any
event the notice of motion dated December 7, 1950, was filed in the Registrar’s office the same date in
accordance with Rule 234 so that the application for an order dispensing with
service may be said to have been made in a pending proceeding.
In view
of this special jurisdiction, section 35 of The Mental Incompetency
Act, R.S.O. 1937, chapter 110, as
[Page 733]
amended
by section 20 of chapter 55 of the 1941 statutes (replacing
subsection 1 of section 36 of the Lunacy Act of 1909) and enacting:—
35.
Subject to the approval of the Lieutenant-Governor in Council, the Rules
Committee may make rules for carrying this Act into effect and for regulating
the costs in relation thereto, and except where inconsistent with the
provisions of this Act or such rules, The Judicature Act and rules made
thereunder shall apply to proceedings under this Act.
does
not prohibit that part of the first order of Mr. Justice Barlow, which
dispensed with service of the notice of motion upon the appellant. On the
contrary, the rules made under The Judicature Act justify it. The rules
as thus interpreted are not inconsistent with any of the other provisions of The
Mental Incompetency Act. Particular stress was placed upon sections 5
and 6. Subsection 3 of the former gives the alleged mentally incompetent
person the right to appeal from any order made by the Court declaring him such.
Section 6 deals with the directing of an issue. Subsection 1 thereof
provides:—
(1)
Where in the opinion of the Court the evidence does not establish beyond
reasonable doubt the alleged mental incompetency, or where for any other reason
the Court deems it expedient so to do, instead of making an order under
subsection 1 of section 5, the Court may direct an issue to try the
alleged mental incompetency.
Other
subsections give directions as to the method and place of trial and give
the alleged mentally incompetent person the like right to move against a
verdict or to appeal from an order made upon or after the trial as may be
exercised by a party to an action including the right of appeal. Section 7
gives the alleged incompetent the right to demand that any issue directed to
determine the question of his mental incompetency be tried with a jury. The
mere fact that provision is thus made for an appeal by the alleged incompetent
and, if the trial of an issue is directed, for his right to demand a jury,
indicates that there is no lack of jurisdiction in the Court hearing a notice
of motion for a declaration of incapacity to direct that notice of motion shall
not be given to the alleged incompetent, where the judge before whom the
application comes is of opinion, as was the case here, that personal service
would be harmful to the party involved. It was suggested that “impracticable” was confined to something
that could not be put to use or practically dealt with but one definition of “practicable” in
[Page 734]
the
Oxford English Dictionary and Funk and Wagnall’s Standard Dictionary is “feasible”. This means not only
feasible in a physical sense since a thing or a proceeding may be said to be
practicable from other points of view and, therefore, the opinions of the
doctors as to the effect upon the appellant of the service upon him of the
notice of motion and copies of the affidavits may be said to make such service
impracticable.
On the
second point raised by the appellant, without referring to any parts of the
affidavits which under any argument presented by counsel for the appellant
might be said to be hearsay, I find myself in agreement with Barlow J. and the
members of the Court of Appeal, all of whom considered that the evidence
submitted to the former was sufficient to “establish beyond reasonable doubt”, as prescribed by
section 6(1) of The Mental Incompetency Act, that the appellant was
a mentally incompetent person. He was admitted to Homewood Sanitarium at Guelph
on October 25, 1950; his wife’s affidavit was sworn to
December 1; that of Dr. Spence on December 2; and the affidavit of Dr. Boyer on
December 6. Dr. Spence had seen the appellant on October 18 and he was one of
the medical men upon whose certificate the appellant was admitted to the
sanitarium. His opinion, based on the facts recited by him and his
observations, was that on December 2 the appellant was unable to transact
ordinary business matters or give proper consideration to the protection and
conservation of his estate. Dr. Boyer examined the appellant on October 24. He
pledged his oath that the appellant had at that time a manic reaction and in
his opinion the appellant needed hospital and custodial care. He also gave his
opinion from the facts set out by him and his observations that the appellant
by reason of his mental condition was unable to transact ordinary business
matters or to give proper consideration to the protection and conservation of
his estate. In view of the opinions expressed by the doctors on December 2nd
and 6th, respectively, and of the contents of Mrs. Wright’s affidavit, sworn to
December 1, the lapse of time between the last occasions upon which the doctors
saw the appellant and the making of the order is not so great or so significant
as to raise any doubt as to the soundness of the order.
[Page 735]
The
third main submission on behalf of the appellant was that there was no
evidence, or insufficient evidence, to justify paragraphs 5, 6(a), (b),
(d), of the report of the Master of December 14, 1950. The Master found
the value of the appellant’s estate to be
approximately $310,000 of which the annual income was about $10,000. According
to an affidavit of Mrs. Wright, she owned the house and property in which
she and the appellant had resided in Forest Hill Village, and personal estate
to the value of about $160,000, which produced an annual income of $6,000. The
cost of maintaining herself and the property was put by her at $9,600 per
annum. While there is no record of any testimony having been given at the time,
it is not disputed that Mrs. Wright and her solicitor and an officer of
the Trust Company attended the Master who questioned Mrs. Wright in order
to satisfy himself as to the nature of the scheme which he should propound.
In
paragraph 5 of the report, which is the first to be objected to, the Master
states:—
5.
I further find that in addition to his wife, the said Laura May Wright, the
said Douglas Guy Hobson Wright had dependent upon him Mrs. Mima Hughes,
the mother of the said Laura May Wright now in her 84th year and a chronic
invalid. I further find that the outlay by the said Douglas Guy Hobson Wright
in respect of the maintenance of the said Mrs. Mima Hughes and for medical
and nursing attendance during the past two years has been approximately $4,500
per year.
We were
informed that Mrs. Mima Hughes died shortly after the making of the report
and, while there is no evidence that she was dependent upon the appellant,
there is no contradiction of the statement to the effect in the Master’s report. I am not prepared
to disagree with the Courts below and set aside paragraph 5 although under
other circumstances a serious view should be taken of the fact that no sworn
testimony was given relating to the matter.
Paragraph
8(a) directed that there be paid to the appellant’s wife for her own support
and maintenance the annual sum of $10,000. In the opinion of Barlow J. and of
the Court of Appeal, this was justified by Mrs. Wright’s affidavit. Paragraph 8(b)
is the one providing for payment of the annual sum of $4,500 for the support,
nursing and medical attendance of Mrs. Hughes. After reporting in
[Page 736]
paragraph
(c) that the present arrangement for the appellant’s care appeared to be
satisfactory, the Master recommended that the committee of the estate be
authorized to provide for the appellant’s continued maintenance at the
Homewood Sanitarium at the rate of $70 per week, together with any medical or
nursing expenses that might be necessary, and to supply any clothes or comforts
that the appellant might properly require. Provision was made that if the rate
of maintenance be increased, the committee be authorized to pay the same with
the approval of the Master. Then came paragraph 8(d) in which,
after stating that the income from the estate would not be sufficient to cover
the cost of the appellant’s maintenance and the other
allowances, it was recommended that the committee be authorized to encroach
upon the corpus of the estate and for this purpose, with the Master’s approval, to sell any of
the assets.
The
appellant and his wife have no children and the wife apparently considered it
not improvident that part of the corpus should be used for the purposes
mentioned. There is no rule that this may not be done and in fact in many cases
it is impossible to provide for the proper maintenance of a mentally
incompetent person without doing so. If it is found that that is not going to
be satisfactory, the matter may always be brought before the Master again.
The
appeal should be dismissed. No order should be made as to costs except that the
costs of the wife and the Trust Company be paid by the committee forthwith
after taxation thereof out of the assets of the appellant’s estate which may be in
the hands of the committee.
The
judgment of Taschereau, Kellock and Estey JJ. was delivered by:
KELLOCK
J.:—This is an appeal by
special leave of this court from an order of the Court of Appeal for Ontario,
dismissing an appeal from an order of Barlow J. of December 8, 1950, declaring
the appellant a mentally incompetent person and directing a reference to the
Master to appoint a committee of his person and estate, and propound a scheme for
his maintenance and the management
[Page 737]
of his
estate. The appeal is also from the subsequent order of Barlow J. of December
22, 1950, which affirmed the Master’s
report.
In his
original order, the learned judge had directed that service upon the appellant
of the notice of the motion should be dispensed with. This order was made upon
the basis of affidavits of two medical witnesses to the effect that personal
service upon the appellant would be harmful to him in view of his condition of
health. With respect to the order of December 8, the appeal is based upon the
contention that the learned judge had no jurisdiction to dispense with service,
and in any event, that the evidence did not justify any declaration of mental
incompetency.
With
respect to the first ground, it is contended that whatever may have been the
situation prior to 1909, when the statute 9 Ed. VII c. 37 was passed, that
statute, in providing by s. 36(1) that The Judicature Act and rules
made thereunder should apply to proceedings under the Act except where
inconsistent with the statute itself, had the effect thereafter of requiring
either personal or substituted service of such notices of motion. In my
opinion, this contention is not well founded.
Jurisdiction
with respect to declarations of lunacy was, in England, until a comparatively
late date, exercised by the Lord Chancellor as delegate of the Sovereign, and
not by the Court of Chancery. When, however, the Court of Chancery was set up
in Upper Canada in 1837 by 7 Wm. IV c. 2, the court was given “like power and authority as
by the laws of England are possessed by the Court of Chancery in England” in all matters relating to
idiots and lunatics and their estates, except where special provision had been
or might be made with respect thereto by any law of the province.
Doubts
subsequently arose as to the jurisdiction thus conferred, and in 1846 the
statute, 9 Vict. c. 10, was enacted to remove these doubts and to extend
the law. The statute recites that “by
the laws of England, the custody, care and management of lunatics, idiots and
persons of unsound mind and their property and estates does not of right belong
to or form part of the jurisdiction of Chancery, but the same
[Page 738]
is
conferred upon the Lord Chancellor or some other person or persons under and by
the commission of the Crown, under the sign manual.” It is therefore enacted
that
it was intended that the said Court of Chancery should have the like
jurisdiction as given to the Lord Chancellor in England.
and
that from and after the passing of the Act, the said court shall
with
a like power and authority as exercised by the Lord Chancellor in England, or
such other person or persons which may be entrusted as aforesaid, have the care
and custody of all lunatics, idiots and persons of unsound mind in that part of
the province, formerly Upper Canada, and of their real and personal estates so
that the same shall not be wasted or destroyed; and shall provide for their
safe keeping and maintenance and for the maintenance of their families and
education of their children out of their personal estates and real estates
respectively.
This
jurisdiction of the Lord Chancellor thus bestowed upon the court was “in its nature” an ex parte jurisdiction;
Re Braithwaite, and was exercised under a
commission granted by the Lord Chancellor and directed to certain persons to
inquire, with the aid of a jury, into the alleged unsoundness of mind, the
inquisition thereupon being returned into the Court of Chancery with the
appropriate finding. Notice of the execution of the commission was not given to
the alleged lunatic unless a caveat had been entered by him or unless an order
were obtained on application to the court directing that reasonable notice be
given to the alleged lunatic; Shelford p. 101; K. v. Daly. If lunacy were found, the
person so declared had the right by petition to traverse the inquisition, and
thereupon the court might direct a new trial which, in Upper Canada, took place
before a judge of the Court of Chancery with the aid of a jury “according to the
circumstances of the case and the situation of the parties.”
In 1857
and again in 1865, alternative modes of proceeding to that by way of
inquisition under a commission, were provided. In 1857, by 20 Vict. c. 56, it
was provided by s. 5 that the court might, on sufficient evidence, declare a
person lunatic without the delay or expense of issuing a commission, “except in cases of
reasonable doubt,” and any person who, before
the Act, had the right to traverse an inquisition might move against such order
or appeal therefrom, as the case might require, subject to the same
[Page 739]
rules
as to time to which the right to traverse was subject. The statute of 1865, 28
Vict. c. 17, provided that where a commission of lunacy would have theretofore
been necessary or proper, the court in lieu thereof, with or without a jury,
might hear evidence and inquire into and determine the alleged lunacy. In such
case the alleged lunatic had the right to demand that the inquiry be submitted
to a jury, or the court might order that the inquiry be had before any court of
record. Section 6 provided that in any such case, no traverse should be
allowed, but the court, if dissatisfied with the finding of a jury, might, at
the instance of any party who would be entitled to traverse an inquisition
under a commission, direct a new trial upon application therefor made to the
court within three months of the verdict. These alternative proceedings were
continued side by side down to the passing of the statute of 1909 when the
procedure by inquisition under a commission was dropped.
While
this was the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery and its successor, the
Supreme Court of Ontario, nevertheless, at a comparatively early date, the court
in ordinary cases would direct notice of the application to be given to the
alleged lunatic, but the jurisdiction to dispense with notice in appropriate
cases remained and was, from time to time, exercised as occasion required.
In Re
Patton, Spragge V.C., in giving
directions on an application pending before him, said that
I
should incline also to require that the alleged lunatic be notified.
When it
subsequently appeared that the officials at the asylum where the alleged
lunatic was confined would not allow him to be served with the petition, as he
was suicidal and to permit it might prove dangerous to him, Vankoughnet C. made
the declaration without service. An example of the normal practice of requiring
notice to be given to the alleged lunatic is to be found in the decision of
Spragge V.C. in In Re Miller. Britton J. in Re
Morrison, was not laying down any
new practice in what he there said. Illustrations also of the exercise of the
jurisdiction to dispense with service are to be found
[Page 740]
in In
Re Main; In Re Newman, and Re Webb, the last mentioned case
being a decision of Mabee J. in 1906.
The
jurisdiction conferred by 9 Vict. c. 10 was continued down through the various
revisions of the statutes and no change in this jurisdiction was made or
intended by the statute of 1909, which in s. 3 reads as follows:
Subject
to the provisions of The Act respecting Lunatic Asylums and the custody of
Insane Persons, the Court shall have all the powers, jurisdiction and
authority of His Majesty over and in relation to the persons and estates of
lunatics, including the care and the commitment of the custody of lunatics and
of their persons and estate.
While
by s. 36, the rules under The Judicature Act are to apply in lunacy
proceedings, they are to apply “except where inconsistent
with the provisions of this Act.”
The jurisdiction conferred upon the Court by s. 3 to make ex parte orders,
renders application of the ordinary rules requiring service quite inconsistent
therewith.
In my
opinion, the provision made by s. 36 with respect to the rules did not change
the situation previously existing, as the Consolidated Rules of 1897 were
already applicable to all proceedings in the Court by reason of s. 122 of The
Judicature Act, R.S.O. 1897 c. 51. The same had also been true of the
earlier rules. It is the fact that Rule 334 of the 1897 rules contained a
provision enabling service to be dispensed with in cases to which it applied,
and this rule goes back to Order 34, s. 5, of the Chancery Orders of 1853.
However, both In Re Patton and Re Newman appear to have been
proceedings under the amendment of 1857 Re Newman is expressly so) and
not proceedings by way of inquisition upon commission, and in neither does it
appear that the jurisdiction to dispense with service was based upon the rule.
On the contrary, the order in Newman’s case was expressly placed upon the
basis of the jurisdiction of the Lord Chancellor as set forth in Shelford on
Lunacy.
Rule
334 was not continued in the revision of the rules in 1913, and until 1921 the
rules did not contain any provision authorizing service of any notice of motion
to be dispensed with. In Re McNab, a decision of Masten J.,
[Page 741]
as he
then was, there were affidavits of two medical men to the effect that it would
be dangerous to serve notice of the application upon the alleged incompetent,
one of the affidavits stating that service upon a Mrs. Austin, who was in
charge of the private sanatarium where the alleged incompetent was being cared
for, would accomplish more than could be effected by personal service.
Examination of the file does not disclose any evidence of service, and there
appears to have been no order for substituted service. The formal order recites
only the affidavits already referred to and the affidavit of the medical
superintendent of the sanitarium, which the report shows the learned judge
required before his order was to go, and while it contains no express provision
dispensing with service, it appears to have been made without notice to the
incompetent, in the same way as that made in Patton’s case. The declaration made
by the order was under s. 36 of the Act of 1914, and was not a declaration of
lunacy. An order in such a case without notice could only have been properly
made by analogy to the jurisdiction with respect to the making of a declaration
of lunacy. Masten J. was a very eminent and a very careful judge, and in my opinion,
would not have made such an order except on the basis of the jurisdiction which
I have discussed.
When
the statute of 1909 was passed, a number of the provisions of the British
Lunacy Act of 1890, 53 Vict. c. 5, were incorporated into the Ontario statute.
The significant thing, however, is that while the English statute, by sub-s. 2
of s. 90, requires notice of the application to be given to the alleged lunatic
if within the jurisdiction, this provision was not incorporated in the Ontario
statute, although s. 3 sub-s. 2 of the latter, which authorizes the making of
declarations, is taken from s. 108 sub-s. 2 of the English Act. At the same
time, sub-s. 1 of s. 3 of the Ontario statute continues the former
jurisdiction. In my opinion, had it been the intention of the provincial
legislature in 1909, with the English statute before it, to affect the existing
jurisdiction to make declarations of lunacy without notice, such an important
change would have been effected by some express provision, such as had been
enacted in Eng-
[Page 742]
land,
rather than by leaving the matter to implication, if such an inference could be
found in the general frame of the statute as, in my respectful opinion, it
cannot be.
There
is a further consideration. The Judicial Committee in Re McLaughlin, per Lord Davey, said:
“It” (i.e. the jurisdiction in lunacy) “exists for the benefit of
the lunatic, and the guiding principle of the whole jurisdiction is what is
most for the benefit of the unhappy subject of the application.”
Although
the legislation in question in that case was not the same as in the case at
bar, the above was said in connection with the very subject matter here under
discussion, namely, the question as to service of notice upon the alleged
lunatic of an application for a declaration of lunacy.
The
guiding principle being as stated, it would surely require very clear statutory
direction to take from the court the discretion conferred upon it in 1846 and
to render obligatory in every case that notice be served upon an allegedly
mentally incompetent person, notwithstanding that in the opinion of
professional witnesses, to do so would be inimical to the interests of “the unhappy subject of the
application.” Yet this is the substance
of the argument put forward on behalf of the appellant.
It is
argued for the appellant that, in any event, the evidence upon which Barlow J.
proceeded in dispensing with service was insufficient. It is, of course, beyond
question that in making orders of this kind, the court ought to require very
clear evidence that the normal course should not be followed. In the case at
bar, however, the evidence was sufficient, both in the view of the learned
judge of first instance and the Court of Appeal, and in these circumstances I
do not think a case has been made out for interfering with the order on that
ground.
It is
next contended on behalf of the appellant that the evidence was not sufficient
to establish the mental incompetency of the appellant beyond a reasonable doubt
at the date of the order in question, or at any date subsequent to the month of
October 1950. It is clear, however, upon the material, that the appellant was
suffering from a mania of a nature which had not developed over-night nor would
[Page 743]
pass
over-night. His condition toward the end of October had become such that he
required custodial care for himself, and he was confined in a private
sanitarium upon the certificates of two medical men pursuant to the Private
Sanitaria Act, R.S.O. 1950 c. 290. He was also quite incapable of caring
for his property, having in fact physically destroyed part of it in quite a
violent way. Such a condition is not one of a mere passing nature. There can, I
think, be taken from the affidavit of the wife, the fact, at least, that the
condition had been of some standing or had been developing for some time. In
fact, the appellant remained in the institution until March 10, 1951, when we
were advised by his counsel he was then released, which release, as appears
from the order of the Master of the 13th of March, 1951, was made pursuant to
the provisions of s. 54 of the Private Sanitaria Act, which provides
that if the superintendent of the sanitarium considers it conducive to the
recovery of a patient that he should be entrusted for a time to the care of
friends, that official may allow such patient to return on trial to his friends
upon receiving an undertaking in writing by one or more of them that an
oversight will be kept over him. The appellant was in this instance released
into the care of a brother. Counsel for the committee applied, under the
provisions of the second paragraph of s. 68 of the Supreme Court Act, to place
the order of the Master in evidence, and in my opinion, it should be admitted.
In the circumstances thus disclosed, in view of the concurrent findings below,
I think that any lacuna, if there be one, in the material is sufficiently
filled in. In my opinion, therefore, the appeal fails with respect to the order
of December 8, 1950.
It is
further contended on behalf of the appellant that there was no evidence, or, in
any event, insufficient evidence to justify the findings of the Master that the
mother-in-law of the appellant, since deceased, was a dependent of his, or to
justify the annual payments for her maintenance and for that of the wife of the
appellant of $4,500 and $10,000 respectively, in addition to the outlay for the
care and maintenance of the appellant himself, resulting in substantial
encroachment upon the corpus of the estate. The only evidence before the Master
upon which these directions were based showed that the appellant’s estate was worth
[Page 744]
some
$310,000 producing an annual income of approximately $10,000, while the wife
herself has a personal estate of some $160,000 from which she derives an annual
income of $6,000. The latter’s affidavit states that the
annual cost of maintaining herself and the city residence of the appellant and
herself will be approximately $9,600. We were told that additional oral
statements of fact were made to the Master in connection with the matters
before him, but that the witnesses were unsworn. These statements were not in a
form to which the Master was entitled to have regard, and on the basis of the
only evidence which the Master had before him, I think that these allowances
were excessive, and that the matter should be remitted to him for
reconsideration.
I would
therefore allow the appeal with respect to paragraphs 5 and 8 (a), (b)
and (d) of the order of the Master of the 14th of December, 1950,
and so much of the order of Barlow J. of the 22nd of December 1950 and the
order of the Court of Appeal as relates to the said paragraphs, and direct that
the matters covered by the said paragraphs be remitted to the Master for
further consideration. The costs of all parties here and below should be taxed
and be paid out of the estate in the hands of the committee.
CARTWRIGHT
J. (dissenting in part):—This is an appeal, pursuant
to leave granted by this court on the 10th of May, 1951, from an order of the
Court of Appeal for Ontario pronounced on the 6th of April, 1951, dismissing
the appeal of Douglas Guy Hobson Wright from two orders of Barlow J. made on
the 8th and 22nd days of December, 1950, respectively, the first declaring the
appellant a mentally incompetent person and directing the usual reference to
the Master and the second confirming the Master’s report.
Both
orders are attacked on several grounds. In the view which I take of the matter
it is necessary to consider only the first order as I have reached the
conclusion that it cannot stand and the second order falls with it.
The
first objection advanced against this order is that it was made without service
upon the appellant of notice of the application, and that consequently the
proceedings were coram non judice and void.
[Page 745]
We were
assisted by counsel by a full and able argument in which the history of
proceedings in lunacy in England and in this country was explored but I do not
find it necessary to go at length into the historical aspect of the matter. The
reasons of my brother Kellock, which I have had the advantage of reading,
satisfy me that following the enactment of Chapter 10 of the Statutes of
Canada, 1846, 9 Victoria, the Court of Chancery exercised the like jurisdiction
in regard to persons of unsound mind as was conferred upon the Lord Chancellor
in England by a Commission from the Crown under the Sign Manual which at that
time included a jurisdiction to proceed ex parte.
That
such jurisdiction was exercised with great caution appears from many reported
cases. In Shelford on Lunacy (1833) the matter is dealt with as follows at page
60:—
The
English constitution has with much care provided protection for persons who are
represented to be of unsound mind; and has been extremely cautious to prevent
the power of the Crown, or of individuals, to interfere with such persons, from
being assumed in any case where it is not required for the safety of the public
and of individuals; because it is difficult to exert such power without
depriving the subject of that liberty, and power of dealing with his property,
which ought to be unrestricted, unless the necessity for restraint be clearly
proved.
It
has, in the first place, made it necessary, before a commission of lunacy is
issued, that a petition should be presented to the person who is delegated to
exercise this authority of the Crown, and imposed on such person the duty of
considering whether there is ground for an inquiry or not. It does not allow
that individual to declare, that the person is of unsound mind; it calls on him
to look through the case which is brought before him, to decide whether or not
there is ground for further inquiry; if he finds that there is, the matter then
goes to a jury of the country. Lord Chancellor Eldon laid it down as
unquestionable, that the Crown has not, in England, the power of taking upon
itself the care of any individuals, either as to their persons or their
property, on the ground that they are of unsound mind, without the verdict of a
jury.
It
appears that the supposed lunatic had a right to be present at the execution of
the commission. The law is so stated in Shelford at page 100 and, in ex
parte Cranmer, The Lord Chancellor, Lord
Erskine, in directing the issue of a commission said:—
The
party certainly must be present at the execution of the Commission. It is his
privilege.
[Page 746]
Notwithstanding
the existence of the safeguards mentioned above and of the right of traverse,
Shelford, in a foot note at page 101, expressed himself as follows:—
It
is a subject of surprise, that such a rule as this should still prevail in
matters of lunacy, and that a commission should be granted without requiring
any notice to be given either to the party to be affected by it, or to some of
his relations which are not concerned in the application; and that it is
practicable for a comparatively secret tribunal to sit in judgment upon the
actions and state of mind of a party, without his having an opportunity of
preparing for his own vindication, and defending himself against the imputation
of insanity. Notwithstanding the right to traverse, it is submitted, with great
deference, that it would be proper to make a general order of Court, requiring
reasonable notice in all cases to be given to the party, or to some of his
relations or friends who are not concerned in the application, of the intention
to apply for a commission of lunacy against him. Such notice, if the party
possessed any reason, would enable him to oppose the application in the first
instance, and would be no obstacle against the issuing of a commission in cases
of absolute necessity.
In 1853
by Chapter 70 of the Statutes of the United Kingdom, 16 and 17 Victoria,
section 40, it was provided, in part:—“Where the alleged lunatic is within
the jurisdiction he shall have notice of the presentation of the petition for
Inquiry.” In such case the alleged
lunatic had the right to demand an inquiry before a jury. Section 45 of
the same Act provided:—
Where
the alleged Lunatic is not within the Jurisdiction the Inquiry shall be before
a Jury, and no further or other Notice shall be necessary to be given to him
than he would have been entitled to receive if this Act had not been passed.
It was
conceded by counsel that in England since 1853 the alleged lunatic has been
entitled to notice if within the jurisdiction.
There
appear to be comparatively few reported cases in Ontario in which the power of
the court to dispense with service on the alleged lunatic and the circumstances
under which such power should be exercised are discussed. Counsel referred us
to the following:—Re Miller, Re Patton, Re Newman, Re Mein, Re Webb, Re Morrison.
[Page 747]
Re
Miller was
a decision of Spragge V.C. on an application to declare a person a lunatic. The
judgment reads as follows:—
The
affidavits are very strong, and leave no reasonable doubt as to the alleged
lunatic being of unsound mind; but he ought to have notice, and any persons,
counsel or others, whom he may desire to see in reference to this application
must have free access to him.
Re
Patton was
a motion to declare a person a lunatic made before Spragge V.C. who declined to
make an order without personal service and adjourned the application taking the
view that the material before him was insufficient. The application was renewed
before Vankoughnet C. supported by an additional affidavit of another medical
man and by evidence that the officers at the asylum would not allow service as
the lunatic was suicidal and it might be dangerous to serve him. The Chancellor
made the order without service on the alleged lunatic.
Re
Newman and
Re Mein were decisions of the Secretary following Re Patton. The
respective headnotes accurately summarize the decisions and are as follows:—
Re
Newman—On an application to
declare a person a lunatic without commission, an affidavit by an officer of a
lunatic asylum that the alleged lunatic is in such a state of mind as that
service on him would be dangerous and prejudicial to him, will not be held
sufficient to dispense with personal service on him.
Where,
however, such affidavit was corroborated by others, and it was evident the party
was a dangerous lunatic, personal service on him was dispensed with.
In
re Mein—Notice of a motion to
declare a person a lunatic and to apply the estate of an alleged lunatic to his
maintenance, &c., in a lunatic asylum, should be served on the lunatic
personally, if it is practicable to do so, without danger to his health or
state of mind. Where, therefore, a notice of such a motion had not been served
on the ground that doing so would be useless in consequence of the state of the
alleged lunatic; the Secretary directed that some medical man, other than the
physician of the asylum, should visit the asylum and give evidence as to the
state of the lunatic, and whether service could be effected on him.
In Re
Webb, Mabee J. followed Re Newman and Re Mein and made an
order dispensing with personal service on the alleged lunatic, but confirming
an order for service on the Superintendent of the Asylum, on evidence that
service “might dangerously excite
the patient.”
[Page 748]
It will
be observed that all these cases were decided prior to 1909. Counsel for the
appellant argues that since the enactment, in that year, of Chapter 37 of the
Statutes of Ontario, 9 Edward VII, the power to dispense with service, if
it existed theretofore, has ceased to exist. It is pointed out that with the
passing of this Act the practice of Inquisition by Commission (which had
continued up to that time, appearing last in R.S.O. 1897, Cap. 65) disappeared
and that thereafter with immaterial verbal changes the practice by which a
person may be declared a lunatic has been that now prescribed in The Mental
Incompetency Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 230 and particularly sections 5, 6,
7, 8 and 35 thereof.
Section 5
is as follows:—
5(1)
The court upon application supported by evidence may by order declare a person
a mentally incompetent person if the court is satisfied that the evidence
establishes beyond reasonable doubt that he is a mentally incompetent person.
(2)
The application may be made by the Attorney-General, by any one or more of the
next of kin of the alleged mentally incompetent person, by his or her wife or
husband, by a creditor, or by any other person.
(3)
The alleged mentally incompetent person and any person aggrieved or affected by
the order shall have the right to appeal therefrom.
(4)
The practices and procedure on the appeal shall be the same as on an appeal
from an order made by a judge of the court.
Section 6
provides that “where in the opinion of the
Court the evidence does not establish beyond reasonable doubt the alleged
mental incompetency” the Court may direct an
issue and deals with the method of trial.
Section 7
reads as follows:—
7.
An alleged mentally incompetent person shall be entitled to demand, by notice
in writing to be given to the person applying for the declaration of his mental
incompetency and also to be filed in the office of the Registrar of the Supreme
Court, Toronto, at least ten days before the first day of the sittings at which
the issue is directed to be tried, that any issue directed to determine the
question of his mental incompetency shall be tried with a jury, and, unless he
withdraws the demand before the trial, or the court is satisfied by personal
examination of the mentally incompetent person that he is not mentally
competent to form and express a wish for a trial by jury and so declares by
order, the issue shall be tried by a jury.
[Page 749]
Section 35
reads as follows:—
35.
Subject to the approval of the Lieutenant-Governor in Council, the Rules
Committee may make rules for carrying this Act into effect and for regulating
the costs in relation thereto, and except where inconsistent with this Act or
such rules, The Judicature Act and rules made thereunder shall apply to
proceedings under this Act.
In my
view, since the enactment of 9 Edward VII, c. 37, power to dispense with
service, if it exists, must be found in The Mental Incompetency Act, in The
Judicature Act, or in the rules made under one of such Acts. I can find no
express provision in either Act which, in my opinion, permits an order of
mental incompetency to be made without service of notice on the person whose
status and property are to be affected. An examination of all the rules to which
reference was made by counsel brings me to the conclusion that service of
notice in such a case is imperatively required.
Reference
may first be made to Rule 2(m) and Rule 11(1):—
2(m)
In Rules 12 to 31 the words “Writ of Summons” and “Writ” shall include any document
by which proceedings are commenced, and shall also include all proceedings by
which a person not a party is added as a party either before or after judgment,
e.g., proceedings in the Master’s office and garnishee and
third party proceedings.
11(1)
When by any statute a summary application without the institution of any action
may be made to the Court or a Judge in a manner therein provided, such
application may also be made by originating notice but any security required by
such statute shall be given.
There
can be no doubt that the notice of motion to declare a person mentally
incompetent is “a document by which
proceedings are commenced” and, therefore, is
included in the words “Writ of Summons” or “Writ” where ever such words
appear in Rules 12 to 31.
Rule 16
is imperative in its terms. It requires the notice to be served personally in
the absence of an acceptance of service by a solicitor who undertakes to
appear. It permits substituted service in a proper case, but in the case at bar
no order for substituted service was asked for or made, and I do not pursue the
question whether such an order could properly have been made. It is necessary
to consider the effect of the opening words of Rule 16 “Save as hereinafter provided.” I can find no provision in
any following rule which is apt to authorize the court to dispense with
[Page 750]
service
on a person whom it is sought to have declared mentally incompetent, although a
number of rules in certain circumstances vary the provisions of Rule 16.
Examples are Rules 18, 21, 23, 24 and 101.
Rules
21 and 22 require consideration. They read as follows:—
21.
Where a mentally incompetent person or person of unsound mind not so found by
inquisition or judicial declaration, is a defendant, service on the committee
of the mentally incompetent person or on the person with whom the defendant of
unsound mind resides, or under whose care he is, shall, unless otherwise
ordered, be deemed good service.
22.
After service of the writ no further proceedings shall be taken against a
defendant who is a mentally incompetent person and has no committee, or no
committee except the Public Trustee, or against a defendant of unsound mind not
so found, until a guardian ad litem is appointed.
It is
argued for the appellant that the definition section of The Judicature
Act should be resorted to in interpreting the word “defendant” in these rules. “Defendant” is defined by
section 1(g) of The Judicature Act as follows—
1.
In this Act * * *
(g)
“defendant” includes a person served
with a writ of summons or process, or served with notice of, or entitled to
attend a proceeding;
The
Interpretation Act, R.S.O.
1950, c. 185, provides by section 32 that “the interpretation section of the
Judicature Act shall extend to all acts relating to legal matters,” and by section 31(a)
provides that “Act” shall include enactment. It may be
suggested that a rule duly passed is an enactment but I am not prepared to
differ from the view expressed by Orde J.A. in Bendjy v. Munton, at 137 that the
interpretation section of The Judicature Act is not by implication
to be extended to the Rules of Practice. But even if it be held that Rules 21
and 22 are applicable only to actions brought against a person mentally
incompetent whether so found or not, I think that by virtue of the concluding
words of Rule 1:—“As to all matters not
provided for in these Rules, the practice shall be regulated by analogy thereto” they furnish a strong
indication that the rules do not contemplate that a person alleged to be of
unsound mind shall be judicially so found, without notice
[Page 751]
to
anyone on his behalf and without the Court having the assistance of someone in
a position to oppose the application.
It was
urged on behalf of the respondent that Rule 213 gives the court jurisdiction to
dispense with notice in such a case as the one at bar. This rule reads as
follows:—
213.
Any application in an action or proceeding shall be made by motion, and unless
the nature of the application or the circumstances of the case render it
impracticable notice of the motion shall be given to all parties affected by
the order sought.
In my
view the words “application in an action or
proceeding” are more apt to describe
interlocutory proceedings than the commencement of a proceeding. The service of
originating notices is specially dealt with in Rules 16, 215 (2), 601 and 602.
The history of the precursors of Rule 213 does not, in my opinion, support the
view that such rule was intended to permit the Court to deal, on originating
notice, with matters affecting the rights of a party in a position analogous to
that of a defendant in a manner as sweeping as would be possible in any action,
without any notice to such party. I have particularly in mind the fact that
from 1913 to 1928 the words “unless the nature of the
application or the circumstances of the case render it impracticable” did not appear in Rule 213
and that from 1897 to 1913 the provision corresponding to such words was Rule
357, reading as follows:—
357.
If satisfied that the delay caused by proceeding by notice of motion might
entail serious mischief, the Court or a Judge may make any order ex parte, upon
such terms as may seem just.
This
rule replaced Rule 527 of the Consolidated Rules of 1888 which was
substantially the same.
If it
can be said that the words of Rule 213 are sufficiently general to appear to
include all motions, the fact remains that the service of originating notices
is specifically dealt with by Rule 16, which, as I have indicated, imperatively
requires service thereof, either personal or substituted, and the general words
of Rule 213 would yield to this special provision. Generalia specialibus non
derogant.
It
remains to be considered whether there is anything in the Mental
Incompetency Act which by necessary implication shews that it was
contemplated that proceedings to
[Page 752]
declare
a person mentally incompetent could be taken ex parte. The scheme of all
the relevant sections of the Mental Incompetency Act seems to me to
contemplate that the alleged mentally incompetent person shall have the right
to resist the application brought to so declare him. Such a right is implicit
in the express statutory right given to such person to demand trial by jury
(section 7) and to appeal (section 5(3)). It appears to me to be
unthinkable that the legislature would expressly give the alleged mentally
incompetent such rights unless it contemplated that he, or some one on his
behalf, should have notice of the proceedings. These rights are not given
conditionally upon his hearing by chance that the proceedings are afoot. They
would be illusory indeed if the whole proceedings could be carried on in secret
so far as the alleged mentally incompetent was concerned. If the matter
appeared to me to be doubtful I would resolve the doubt in favour of requiring
that notice be given to a person of proceedings the result of which may be to
alter his status, to deprive him of liberty of action and to remove all his
property from his control. To establish an exception to the elementary rule “audi alteram partem”, clear and unambiguous
authority is required and I can find none. As is said in Broom’s Legal Maxims, 10th
Edition, at page 67:—
“The laws of God and man,” said Fortescue J., in Dr.
Bentley’s Case, “both gave the party an
opportunity to make his defence, if he has any.” And immemorial custom cannot avail in
contravention of this principle.
In the
only reported case since 1909 to which we were referred by counsel; Re
Morrison, the note reads, in part,
as follows:—
Britton
J. in a written judgment, said that an application to have a man declared a
lunatic or incompetent to manage his business should at least be upon notice to
the supposed incompetent of intention to make the application. Service of this
notice should be proved.
To
permit a person’s rights to be dealt with
in a judicial proceeding unless he has had an opportunity of being heard is
contrary to the fundamental principles of the law, and appears to me
particularly undesirable in a case such as this in which, if the order in
appeal is upheld, the appellant who has been deprived, unheard, of his status
and property is left without remedy except such as is afforded
[Page 753]
by
section 9 of The Mental Incompetency Act. Except by leave of the
Court he can not even be heard until a year has expired from the date of the
order declaring him incompetent and, when he does obtain a hearing, instead of
it lying upon those who question his competency to prove their case beyond a
reasonable doubt he must assume the burden of satisfying the court that he has
become mentally competent and capable of managing his own affairs. I find this
prospect particularly disquieting in the case at bar where the appellant has no
control over any of his own property and, for reasons which do not appear in
its oral judgment, the Court of Appeal has not permitted recourse to be had to
such property for the purpose of paying the appellant’s costs of taking the appeal which the
Statute expressly authorized. The way of a suitor is not easy when all his
assets are in the hands of those who oppose his suit.
I have
reached the conclusion that Barlow J. had no jurisdiction to entertain the
motion without service of notice upon the appellant or properly authorized
substituted service and that the order of December 8, 1950, must be set aside.
If I
had found that the court had jurisdiction to dispense with service of notice of
the proceedings I would, with the greatest respect, have been of opinion that
the material before Barlow J. was insufficient to warrant the making of either
an order dispensing with service or an order of mental incompetency. The
learned Judge had before him three affidavits. The affidavit of the applicant
was sworn on December 1, 1950. It does not deal with the question of service
nor does it indicate that she had seen the appellant since the month of October
when she describes the conduct on his part which is described in the affidavit
of Dr. Spence. In considering the affidavits of Dr. Spence and Dr. Boyer it is
necessary to bear in mind the provisions of Rule 293:—
293.
Affidavits shall be confined to the statement of facts within the knowledge of
the deponent, but on interlocutory motions statements as to his belief, with
the grounds therefor, may be admitted.
The
affidavit of Dr. Spence offends against this rule. In paragraph 2 he speaks of
the appellant having “a history of having had one
depression during my absence with the
[Page 754]
Canadian
forces overseas.” Even on an interlocutory
application such a statement would be inadmissable unless the source of the
deponent’s information was given.
Paragraph 4 of the affidavit is hearsay. In it Dr. Spence deposes to
information given to him by one of the doctors at the Sanitarium where the
appellant was a patient. When those parts of the affidavit which are
inadmissible are disregarded what remains is a statement that the deponent
examined the appellant on the 18th of October, 1950, and then found him
disturbed mentally and under delusions as to the proximity of the North Koreans
and “that everything about him
was atomic sensitive and had to be de-ionized which was accomplished by hitting
the objects with an old cavalry sword”
and that he was acting in a violent manner and had done much damage to the
contents of the dwelling house. There is nothing in the affidavit to indicate
with any certainty that the deponent saw the appellant on any occasion
subsequent to the 18th of October. His affidavit was sworn on the 2nd of
December, 1950.
The
affidavit of Dr. Boyer was sworn on the 6th of December, 1950. He tells of
having examined the appellant on the 24th of October, 1950. He states that the
appellant “was friendly but arbitrary
and undoubtly psychotic,” that he “was quite delusional but
that there was no constancy in any delusion except the effect of electrical
influences”. He expresses the opinion
that the appellant “has a manic reaction, the
cause of which is not apparent” and “that he needs hospital and
custodial care.” There is nothing in the
affidavit to indicate that the deponent saw the appellant on any date other
than the 24th of October, 1950.
Both
doctors state in their affidavits that in their respective opinions the
appellant “is by reason of his mental
condition unable to transact ordinary business matters or to give proper
consideration to the protection and conservation of his estate” and that “it would be inadvisable to
serve on the said Douglas Guy Hobson Wright the notice of motion for the
appointment of Committees of his person and estate and supporting affidavit. To
do so would in all probability exaggerate his disturbed mental condition and be
harmful to him.”
[Page 755]
It is
to be observed that neither doctor expresses the opinion that service of the
papers would be attended with danger to the appellant or that he lacked the mental
capacity to understand the nature of the proposed proceedings and to determine
whether or not he wished to instruct counsel to oppose them. If one contrasts
this material with that which was before the court in the cases of Re
Patton, Re Newman and Re Mein (supra) it at once
becomes apparent how far it falls short of what was required in those cases.
There
are other matters as to which it was, I think, necessary for the court to have
information which are not dealt with in the affidavits at all. The physical
health of the appellant is not referred to. The cause of the alleged mental
trouble is not given. Nothing is said in the way of prognosis. The court is
left without information as to whether the recovery of the alleged incompetent is
probable or otherwise and if probable, within what interval of time it is
likely to occur. Nothing is said as to the ability or otherwise of the
appellant to understand the nature of the proposed proceedings or to instruct
counsel. The lack of any admissible evidence as to the condition of the
appellant at any time subsequent to the 24th of October, 1950, was in itself,
in my opinion, a sufficient reason for refusing to make any order.
It is
scarcely necessary to say that if an application of this sort is to be allowed
to be made ex parte it is the duty of the court to be extremely cautious
to protect the person whose status and property are being dealt with without
his knowledge and without his having any opportunity to make answer. Even if the
statute did not, as it does, expressly require as a condition of making an
order that the court be satisfied that the evidence established beyond a
reasonable doubt the fact of mental incompetency, I would have regarded the
evidence as falling far short of the minimum necessary to justify the making of
an order.
In view
of the conclusion which I have reached as to the order of December 8th it
becomes unnecessary for me to deal with the order of December 22nd which would
fall with the earlier order, but as I understand that I have the misfortune to
differ from the other members of the court
[Page 756]
as to
the order of December 8th, I desire to add that if I had been of opinion that
such last‑mentioned order should stand I would have agreed with my
brother Kellock for the reasons given by him, that paragraphs 5 and 8 (a),
(b) and (d) of the report of the Master of December 14,
1950, and so much of the order of Barlow J. of the 22nd of December, 1950, and
of the order of the Court of Appeal, as relates to such paragraphs, should be
set aside and that the matters covered by the said paragraphs should be
remitted to the Master for further consideration and I would have agreed with
the order as to costs proposed by my brother Kellock.
For all
the above reasons I would allow the appeal and set aside the order of the Court
of Appeal and the orders of Barlow J. of December 8, 1950 and December 22,
1950, in toto. As the other members of the Court are of a different
opinion nothing would be gained by my discussing the question as to the order
which should be made as to costs in the unusual circumstances of this case.
Appeal from the judgment of
the Court of Appeal in so far as it dismissed the appeal from the order of
Barlow J. of Dec. 8, 1950, dismissed; in so far as it dismissed the appeal from
the order of Barlow J. of Dec. 22,1950, allowed.
Solicitors for the
appellant: Duncan & Bicknell.
Solicitors for the
respondent, Laura May Wright: MacDonald & MacIntosh.
Solicitors for the
respondent, Guaranty Trust Company of Canada: Mungovan & Mungovan.
(1806) 12
Ves. Jr. 446 at 455.