Anderson v. Schwitzer

20 N.W.2d 67, 236 Iowa 765, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 16, 1945
DocketNo. 46706.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 20 N.W.2d 67 (Anderson v. Schwitzer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Schwitzer, 20 N.W.2d 67, 236 Iowa 765, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 369 (iowa 1945).

Opinion

Garfield, J.

This appeal involves the sufficiency of count 2 of plaintiffs’ amended petition, filed July 8, 1944, and an amendment thereto. Said count states in substance that the two plaintiffs are daughters of defendant, Claus Schwitzer, who is past eighty-eight years old, of unsound mind, and incompetent to manage his property and business affairs; on November 18, 1941, defendant’s daughters, Alvena and Rosie Telsrow, procured defendant and his wife to sign a petition under section 12617, Code, 1939, for the appointment of said Alvena and Rosie as guardians of the person and property of their father and mother, had said petition presented to the district court and an order entered appointing the said Alvena and Rosie guardians of the person and property of their father; since then, Alvena and Rosie have been acting as guardians under that appointment ; at all times since some years prior to such appointment, defendant has been entirely under the domination and control of his daughters Alvena and Rosie; when guardians for defendant' were appointed on November 18, 1941, defendant was, because of mental incapacity, not a person entitled to petition for a guardian, under Code section 12617; defendant, because of his existing mental incapacity, should be adjudicated incompetent and a guardianship based upon such adjudication established.

In the prayer plaintiffs ask that the order of November 18, 1941, be set aside, defendant be adjudged of unsound mind, permanent guardian of defendant’s person and property be appointed, and such other orders be made as shall be proper.

Defendant and his guardians, Alvena and Rosie Telsrow, *767 filed a motion to dismiss the above pleading and in support thereof stated in part: Plaintiffs’ pleading is an attempt to attack collaterally the prior appointment of guardians and alleges no sufficient cause of action or cause for the appointment of any other guardian for defendant; the pleading shows on its face that a guardian has been appointed for defendant; the method or manner of such appointment is not material in view of the fact that guardians are now acting in the matter; whether defendant is of unsound mind or was when guardians were appointed for him is of no consequence. The court sustained the motion to dismiss on each ground and granted plaintiffs time in which to plead over.

Within the time allowed, plaintiffs filed an amendment to count 2 of their petition, in which they alleged in substance that the order of November 18, 1941, was void because: Defendant was a lunatic at the time and therefore could not petition for the appointment of a guardian; the application purported to be made by defendant and his wife was not in fact their application but was the application of Alvena and Rosie Telsrow, by whosé counsel it was presented, and the order was obtained in furtherance of their purpose and design to obtain complete control and dominion over defendant’s person and property.

Defendant and his guardians filed a motion to strike the foregoing amendment because it does not add matters sufficient to avoid the insufficiency of count 2 and is an improper collateral attack on the order of November 18, 1941. The court sustained this motion upon each ground. Plaintiffs did not plead further but filed a written election to stand on the record theretofore made and appealed to this court.

I. A vital question presented by this appeal is whether the powers and duties of a guardian appointed under Code section 12617 upon the ward’s own application are as broad as the powers and duties of a guardian appointed under section 12614. As stated, count 2 of the petition alleges that since November 1941 defendant has been under guardianship pursuant to a petition signed by him. Concededly, defendant is a fit and proper subject for guardianship. Plaintiffs so allege and seek to have a guardian appointed. Defendant and the acting guardians contend that in view of the existing guardian *768 ship it is unnecessary and improper to have another guardian appointed under section 12614.

Plaintiffs seek to avoid defendant’s contention by the argument that under the statutes there are two distinct classes of guardianship: a limited one, under section 12617, and a general guardianship based on an adjudication of unsoundness of mind, under section 12614. We are told in effect that the appointment of a guardian under 12617 is insufficient protection for an incompetent because the ward is free to act for himself in certain respects and the guardian is a mere agent.

In our opinion there is no distinction between the powers and duties of a guardian appointed under section 12617 and one appointed under 12614. The statutes make no such distinction and we are powerless to do so. In fact, as we shall point out, the statutes in effect affirmatively provide there is no such distinction. We are compelled, therefore, to reject plaintiffs’ contention that there are the two distinct classes of guardianship.

Section 12614, under which plaintiffs seek to have a guardian appointed for defendant, is as follows:

“When a petition, verified by affidavit, is presented to the district court that any inhabitant of the county is: 1. An idiot, lunatic, or person of unsound mind; or 2. An habitual drunkard, incapable of managing his affairs; or 3. A spendthrift who is squandering his property; and the allegations of the petition are satisfactorily proved upon the trial, the court may appoint a guardian of the property of such person.”

Section 12617, under which the acting guardians were appointed, reads:

“Any person, other than an idiot or lunatic, may, upon his own application, by verified petition, have a guardian appointed for his person or property, or both, if, in the opinion of the district court or judge to whom the petition is presented, said appointment would inure to the best interest of said applicant. ’ ’

What, is now 'section 12614, so far as material here, was formerly section 3219, Code of 1897, and section 6670 of the *769 Compiled Code, 1919. What is now section 12617 was originally enacted in 1923 by the Fortieth General Assembly (chapter 199) as an amendment to section 3219, Code of 1897 (the present section 12614), “by adding thereto as paragraph four the following: 4” (here follows substantially what is now section 12617). A year later this section as it stood following this amendment was, by the Fortieth Extra General Assembly (chapter 162, Unpublished Acts), divided into four sections corresponding to the present sections 12614 to 12617, inclusive. The only statutory provision which deals with a guardian appointed on the ward’s own application is the present 12617. The identical statutes that prescribe the powers and duties of a guardian appointed under 12614 (on the application of another) also prescribo the powers and duties of a guardian appointed under 12617 (on the ward’s own application). This is made clear by section 12613, which reads:

“The provisions of chapters 539 and 540, and all other laws relating to guardians for minors, and regulating or prescribing the powers, duties, or liabilities of each, and of the court or judge thereof, so far as the same are applicable, shall apply to guardians and their wards appointed under sections 12614 to 12618, inclusive.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 N.W.2d 67, 236 Iowa 765, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-schwitzer-iowa-1945.