In Re Estate of Ost

235 N.W. 70, 211 Iowa 1085
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 17, 1931
DocketNo. 40702.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 235 N.W. 70 (In Re Estate of Ost) 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
In Re Estate of Ost, 235 N.W. 70, 211 Iowa 1085 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Wagner, J.

On September 24, 1930, the ward, August Ost, by Ms attorneys, T. J. Drees and Ralph Maclean, filed in the guardianship proceeding an application verified by one of said attorneys. It is alleged in said application, in substance, as follows: That, in the year 1925, Clara Ost, wife of August Ost, filed a petition alleging that the said August Ost was a person of unsound mind, and asking that she be appointed Ms guardian; that thereafter, proceedings were had in said matter in court, which resulted in her appointment as the guardian of the person and property of this applicant; that said Clara Ost duly qualified as said guardian and took possession of the property of said ward; that, at the time of her appointment as guardian, this applicant was the owner of 80 acres of land, and had funds on deposit in banks amounting to several thousand dollars; that, in the same year (1925), the said Clara Ost filed in the office of the clerk of the district court an information, duly verified, alleging that the said August Ost is insane, and such proceedings were had thereafter as resulted in the confinement of the said August Ost in the state hospital for the insane at Cherokee, where he has since been and is now confined.

“That this petitioner desires to apply for orders vacating such guardianship and restoring him to the management of his property and to secure his freedom from imprisonment in said hospital, and that he has employed the attorneys named above. That, in order to properly bring such action and conduct them as they should be, it will be necessary for the said attorneys to employ alienists of standing, to examine this applicant and to make investigation into the facts upon which said applications will be based, and to incur expenses for costs and otherwise. Wherefore this petitioner prays that an order be made on his said guardian * * * that she be required to furnish to counsel for this applicant a reasonable sum of money to be used by them for the payment to themselves of a retainer and a reasonable *1087 per diem for services rendered and to be rendered in bringing and conducting said actions and to secure the services of alienists and to pay the expenses for necessary investigations of facts therein, such sum to be not less than $1,000. ’ ’

Such application was set down for hearing, and notice served upon the guardian as prescribed by the court. The guardian appeared and filed a motion, in which she asks that the court require the attorneys who have filed the aforesaid application to produce and prove their authority to act in behalf of said insane person.

In response to said motion, the attorneys filed the affidavits of Drees, one of said attorneys, and Mrs. Berner, sister of the ward. In the affidavit of the sister, she states, in substance, that she was present at the Cherokee hospital in the latter part of June, 1930, when Drees and her brother, August-Ost, had a conversation; that her brother (the ward) informed Drees at that time that he was not insane, and that he desired to bring an action or actions to establish his sanity, and requested said attorney to bring said actions and to secure such legal "assistants” as he might deem necessary, and to secure the services of such alienists as might be necessary to secure his release from the asylum; that her brother informed the attorney that he had no money, but that his guardian was in possession of several thousand dollars of his money, and that he owned 80 acres of Calhoun County land; that her associations with her brother had been rather close, and that she had observed his actions and his conversation, not only at the time when he was adjudged insane, but since; and that, at and before the time when he was adjudged insane, he talked like a sick man, but not like an insane man; that she has frequently seen him since the time of his confinement in the hospital, and has observed his physical and mental condition; that physically he has improved; and that, ever since he has been confined, when she has visited him she has talked to him about his condition, and has had general conversations with him; that "in these conversations he has always said that he is not insane; ’ ’ and that his mental operations seemed to her to be normal.

In the affidavit of Drees, the attorney, he states, in substance, that, on or about the 30th day of June, 1930, he went to the hospital for the insane at Cherokee, and there saw August *1088 Ost, the ward; that Ost told him that he desired to bring actions to secure his release from the hospital and the determination by a court that he was a person of sound mind, and requested and authorized him to bring such actions as might be necessary or advisable to secure this result; that Ost informed him that he had no money, and that Ms guardian was hostile to him, and would not bring nor cause such actions to be brought; that, in his opinion, based on this one interview, said ward is mentally sound.

The guardian moved to dismiss the application, for reasons which may be summarized as follows: That no satisfactory showing has been made of the authority of the' attorneys to prosecute this proceeding; that the application on its face shows that it is an attempt to deplete the assets of the estate, as Section 3571, Code, 1927, prescribes an inexpensive way for determining the truth as to the sanity of a person confined in the asylum; that the application on its face shows that the interest of the said ward or the interest of the state or the interest of the ward’s estate is not sought by an impartial hearing to ascertain the mere truth of the matter, but for the purpose of causing the estate of the ward to be involved in expensive litigation; that the application on its face shows that it is intended to involve said estate in expert fees and large attorney fees, without any warrant under the statute, especially since the statute provides an inexpensive method by which anyone interested may obtain the truth as to the confinement; that no part of the application should be granted for attorneys’ fees or costs until an investigation is had under Section 3571, Code, 1927; that, if it were possible for the court to grant such an application as made in this case on behalf of the person in the insane asylum, the practice would be obnoxious, in that the same would be used in each and every case of persons confined in the hospital for the insane, as a means of creating work and labor for attorneys, which would deplete and destroy the assets of wards of the state, which the court is in duty bound to protect.

The court dismissed the application, refusing to grant the order therein prayed. It is shown by the abstract that, on October 3, 1930, the guardian filed a report, which discloses that she is in possession of 80 acres of land belonging to the ward, and has cash (certificates of deposit in banks) amounting to $3,400.

*1089 The question for our determination is: Did the court err in dismissing the application and refusing the'order? It will be observed that the ward, August Ost, has been judicially declared to be of unsound mind in the guardianship proceeding;it will also be observed that he has been found to be insane by the commissioners of insanity of the county of his legal settlement, and committed to the hospital for the insane for treatment, where he is now confined. He is, therefore, presumed to be of unsound mind. See Hazen v. Donahoe,

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Bluebook (online)
235 N.W. 70, 211 Iowa 1085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-ost-iowa-1931.