
    Castleman against Castleman.
    Chancery.
    [Mr. Owsley for plaintiff: Messrs. Sanders and Depew, and Mr. Lyle for defendant.]
    From the Circuit Court for.Gallatin County.
    
      November 3.
    The county in which a person has his domicil and property, is the only proper place for an inquisition as to the state of his mind, and so the nature and perty; and for the appointment and control of a committee. And in any stage of such a proceeding, even after the appointment of a committee-while the case remains control of the court — upon its being shown that the lunatic has been removed from his home and his county, for the purpose of an inquisition, the whole proceedings should be annulled, by the circuit court, as they will be here.
   Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Upon the report to the Circuit Court of Gallatin, of an inquisition deciding that Mrs. Jemima Castleman was of unsound mind, and was possessed of property exceeding in value eighty thousand dollars — one of her sons appeared, in her behalf, and made affidavit that her home and her property were in Woodford county, where she had lived for half a century; and that she had been, as he believed, surreptitiously taken to Gallatin, only a few days prior to that time, for the fraudulent purpose of holding over her, m a strange pjace, an inquisition ot lunacy; and upon that affidavit, a motion was made to enquire into the facts stated, and thereupon to quash the inquisition; but the Circuit Judge, having just made an order for appointing a committee, refused to admit proof of the facts stated in the affidavit.

There was, we think, manifest error in the course pursued by the Circuit Court. The judge, as long as the case was before him, and subject to his control, should, even ex officio, have instituted an enquiry into the facts suggested in the affidavit. And certainly, if those facts be time, gross injustice has been done. The county where Mrs. Castleman was domiciled,’ and well known, and where all her property was situated, was the proper, and only proper place, for the inquisition as to her state of mind, and the nature and value of her estate, and for the appointment and control of a committee.

Whei'efore, the order approving the inquisition and appointing a committee, is set aside and annulled, and the case remanded for further proceedings.  