In Re Guardianship of Fisher

284 N.W. 821, 226 Iowa 596
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 14, 1939
DocketNo. 44628.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 284 N.W. 821 (In Re Guardianship of Fisher) 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 Guardianship of Fisher, 284 N.W. 821, 226 Iowa 596 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

This record presents another unfortunate family legal entanglement, growing out of a guardianship matter, wherein the father acting as guardian of the property.of his minor children and, because he was their father gave little attention to legal formalities in the management of the property, assumed that the natural ties of love and affection would remain unbroken and prompt all parties concerned to deal justly among themselves. In this particular ease, the father, apparently without sufficient experience to realize the importance of observing certain legal requirements in the management of the property of his children, had the additional misfortune of having selected an attorney, who, not only neglected to competently guide the guardian but actually lulled him to sleep with soothing promises that everything would be all right, gave the guardian to understand he was doing and would continue to do whatever was necessary to be done in the matter and then did nothing. No reports of any kind were made and no inventory filed in the guardianship matter. When the children became of age, a settlement was made with them by paying each of them the sum of $300 in cash and giving a personal note for $200 which the children accepted in full settlement. There was no difficulty between them; the daughter, who was a schoolteacher, stated to the father that she thought there was more than this amount coming but, nevertheless, they signed the receipt and accepted the money and notes and made no complaint for more than two years thereafter. It seems the father defaulted in payment of one of the notes and the daughter consulted an attorney in connection with the collection of the note and the trouble started.

The money involved came from the estate of the mother, Amelia Fisher, who died intestate on July 10, 1915, leaving surviving as her only heirs at law her husband, Louis F. Fisher, a son, Francis, three years old and a daughter, Alice, 18 months old. Louis F. Fisher was appointed administrator of her estate. The estate was fully settled and the administrator discharged on December 14, 1917. The final report showed funds distributed as follows: $511.50 to the surviving spouse, re *598 ceipted for by Louis F. Fisher, individually, and $1,023 distributed to Louis F. Fisher, as guardian of the two minor children, and receipted for by Fisher in his capacity as guardian.

On November 13, 1936, Francis and Alice Fisher caused a petition to be filed praying that a citation issue commanding the guardian to show cause why he had not filed a final report and accounted for the money held by him as their guardian, the petition reciting that the guardian had received in excess of $1,000 belonging to the minors on or about November 11, 1916, .and that, at the time they attained their majority, he paid each of them $300 in cash and gave his note for $200 to each of them; that no report of any kind had ever been made and no accounting for the interest accumulations on the money which he had received as their guardian. Citation was duly issued and Louis F. Fisher, as guardian, was required to file a report and accounting in said guardianship on or before November 23, 1936.

On January 2, 1937, the guardian filed a final report and petition for discharge in which he alleged that, on May 5, 1934, after the minors became of age, he made a settlement with them by paying each of them $300 in cash and delivering his note for $200 to each of them and that the guardian and the wards had agreed on this amount in settlement. Thereafter, on January 11, 1937, the guardian filed an amendment to the final report setting up in five separate divisions affirmative matters as follows:

That Amelia Fisher, the mother of the minors, died intestate leaving $1,200; that this money was mingled with that of the husband, the aggregate amount on deposit at the time of her death being $1,785; that through error on the part of the attorney, who represented Louis F. Fisher as administrator in the settlement of his wife’s estate, this entire sum was inventoried and also shown in the final report as property belonging to the estate of Amelia Fisher and that, in receipting for said money in his individual capacity and as guardian, he made a mistake and that the receipts should have been for $315.50 each and the receipt which he signed for $1,023 was signed through error and mistake.

That in contemplation of death, Amelia Fisher gave all her property, including this deposit which was inventoried in the estate, to Louis F. Fisher, her husband, and requested him to *599 give each of the minors $500 of the money when they became 21 years of age.

That Louis F. Fisher, from the date of his marriage to Amelia Fisher until the 1st of March, 1936, lived on a certain 120-acre farm in Hardin county which was owned by James Praska, the father of Amelia Fisher; that, after the death of Amelia Fisher, there was a family agreement between Louis F. Fisher, as guardian, and James Praska for the benefit of the minor children whereby Fisher was to continue to occupy the farm, during the lifetime of Praska and, at his death, a certain portion of the farm was to be transferred to the minors, Fisher to pay the taxes, insurance, and $100 cash per year and keep up the improvements and that, at the time he moved from the farm, Fisher was to make no claim for such improvements; that this agreement was made for the benefit of the minors and was subsequently approved and confirmed by them.

The guardian further alleged that, from the year 1921 to 1934, he was financially unable to contribute to the support of the minors and it was necessary to use their funds for necessities and that, since 1921, he spent $281.36 for necessities for Francis and $384.19 for necessities for Alice for which he asked credit.

That all of these matters were by the guardian explained to his wards and that the wards consented to this family arrangement and agreed to accept the $500 in full settlement and that they signed receipts acknowledging full settlement with him as their guardian and the guardian prayed that his final report be approved and that he be discharged and that he have judgment for costs.

By way of answer and objections to the final report, the children set up the fact that the guardian had receipted the administrator of the mother’s estate for the sum of $1,023; that, at the time the $500 was paid to them, they did not know the amount of money which was due them; that no accounting had ejver been made and they were not informed as to the amount due them; that they were not informed as to how the funds had been invested and no final report or explanation was made to them before signing said receipts and, by reason of said facts, a fraud was perpetrated upon them, one of whom was a minor at the time they signed the receipts; that they had no knowledge of the family arrangement alleged in the guardian’s re *600

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Related

In Re Estate of Seefeld
292 N.W. 843 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1940)
City of Des Moines v. Board of Civil Service Commissioners
287 N.W. 288 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
284 N.W. 821, 226 Iowa 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-fisher-iowa-1939.