Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Honorable Thos. A. IMat County Attorney Liberty County Liberty, Texas Dear Sirr Opinion No. O-1796 Rer Must a,~~rson who is ohalrgedwith being insane be present inthe court during the lunacy hearing? Your request for an opinion.on the above st+ted question has been reoeived by this department. Your letter reads in part a6 follows: "The County Clerk of Liberty County, Texas, has sub- mitted to me the question aa to whether or not a arson who is alleged to be insane, who is~in an insane hospital in the City of Galveston, Texas, can be tried in a lunaoy prooeed- ing in the County Court of Liberty County, Texas, in the ab- 8enoe of the accused or rather the person ohargad to be in- sane. 1, . . ." A lunacy inquisition is a proceeding instituted by the state primarily for the purpose of dotsmining the question as to whether an alleged lunatic should be oonfined bsoausa of his danger to, and the safety of, soaiety. This proceeding is wholly statutory. The court try- ing the cass has only such authority as expressly given or clearly implied by the statutes, and the alleged inq,pnpstenthas the right to insist on a strict complianoe with every form prqscribed for his protsotion. The proosdure foradjudgingone not charged with crime to be a person of unsound mind and providing for his restraint is solely through the county aourts: and although the state is a party to such an inqa:.ry,, the character of the proceeding is essentially civil. See Tex. Juris. Vol. 24, p. 388. Honorable Thos. A. Wheat, page 2 (O-1795) House Rill No. 249, Chapter 174, Acts of the 39th bgisla- tura, 1925, whiah is brought forward in Vernon's Annotated Civil Statutes as Artiolss 3190 to 3193-o. inclusive, was an aot providing for the care, restraint, diagnosis, and treatment of persons who are insane, mentally or or mentally defective; providing for regulating and for the operation of public institutions and hospitals for such persons8 providing for the neoessary officers, agents, agencies and employees for suoh purpose and to administer and enforce the laws rmlrting to such personst providing for sustenance and maintenance; providing for edurstion and research relating to,such parson2 providing for psychopathic research relating to such per- sons providing for the adiudination o finsanity or mental sickness or de- foot, the oommitmentand restrainin2 persons 60 afflicted; prescribing rules and regulations ani defining offenses in conneotion withthe'care and treatment of such person: providing the necessary funds and fixing necessary salaries to carry out the purposes ?f the act: repealing provi- sions of the Revised Civil Statutes and ~11 other laws in confliot there- with; and declaring an emergency. Senate Bill No. 259, Chapter 446, Acts of the 45th Legislature, 1937, was an act providing for a unifona method for trial of persons of un- sound mind and defining the status of oontracts which such person might have entered'prior to court judgment of inoompstenoy and providing for the apprehension, arrest, end trial of persons not charged with criminal of- fense, alleged to be of unsound mind by filing an information under oath before a county judge or justioe of the peace and the issuanoe of the war- rant of arrest thereon and return thereof to the county judge: providing for the setting of the time and place for the hearing of said oomplaint and for notioe thereof to such persons$ providing for the summoning of the jury to hear and determine the issues to bs subnitked in said OIUW; pro- viding for a procedure for determining and adjudicating the restoration to sound mind; providing for the protection of those dealing with persons of unsound mind who have not been so adjudicated; providing that this act shall not affect any court action or proceeding and that if any seotion, clause, or provision of thisaot shall be declared to be invalid, suoh holding shall not affect any other seotion, clause or provision thereof3 and further providing that the act shall be ounulative of Articles 5550 to 5561, both articles inolusive, of the 1925 Revised Civil Statutes of Texas; violating proceedings, orders, and judgments of county or probate courts adjudicating certain persons to be of unsound mind, and deolaring an omer- g-w. This act is brought forwurd in Vernon's Annotated Civil Statutes as Article 5561a. This statute supsrqdesthe statutes brought forth in Chapter 174, Acts of the 39th Legislature, supra, providing for the adjud- ication of insanity or mental sickness or defeats end now must be follow- ed in oases for the adjudicafion of insanity. Sections 1 and 2 of Article 5561a, Vernon's Civil Statutes, reads as followsr "Seotion 1. If information in writing under oath be given to my county judge that any person in his county, not charged with Hon. Thos. A. Weat - Page 3 (O-1796) a criminal offense, is a person of unsound mind, and that the welfare of either such person or any other person or perscatsrequires that he be placed under restraint, and such county judge shall believe suah information to be true, he shall forthwith issue a warrant for the apprehension of suoh person, or, if such like information be given to any justice d the peace in such county, said justice may issue awarrant for the apprehension of said parson, making said c-plaint and warrant returnable to the oounty oourt of said county, and said oounty judge in either event shall fix a time and plaoe for the hearing and determination of the matter, either in term time or in vacation, whiah place shall be either at the court house of the oounty or at the residence of the person named, or at any other place in the county, as the county judge may de= best for such hearing. Notice of the time, place and purpose of such hearing shall be served upon the person oharged, such notice to be under the hand and seal of the clerk of said county, and sex-redand returned by the sheriff, and the re- turn to state the time and place of service. Such notice shall ba semed not less than three days prior to the day of the hearing. "Sea. 2. The warrant provided for herein shall run in the name of 'The State of Texas, ( and shall be directed to the sher- iff or any constable of the county, and the offioer receiving same shall forthwith take into custody the person named therein, and at the designated time and plaoe shall have him and the re- turn of said warrant before the oounty judge for examination and trial.' Section 2 of Article 5561a, supra, specifically provides that the warrant provided for in the statute shall run in the name of the State of Texas, and shall be directed to the sheriff or any constable of the county, aad the officer receiving the same shall forthwith take into custody the per- son named therein, and at the designated time and place shall have him and the return of said lrarrantbefore the county judge for examination and trial. Therefore, you are respectfully advised that it is the opinion of this depart- ment that a defendant in a lunaoy proceeding must be present and before the court during the lunacy prooaeding. Trusting that the foregoing fully answers your inquily, we remain Yours very truly AFPROVED JAN 12 1940 ATTOBNFX GENERAL OF TEXAS a/ W/P/boom BY FIRST ASSISTUT s/ Ardall ppilliams ATTORNXY GENERAL Ardell Williams Assistant