In Re Guardianship of Kappel

47 N.W.2d 825, 242 Iowa 1021, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 361
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 8, 1951
Docket47832
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 N.W.2d 825 (In Re Guardianship of Kappel) 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 Kappel, 47 N.W.2d 825, 242 Iowa 1021, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 361 (iowa 1951).

Opinions

Thompson, J.

On June 14,1950, Annie Mehmen and others filed in the district court of Butler County, Iowa, a petition asking the appointment of a guardian for the property of Bertha Kappel, under the provisions of section 670.2, Code of 1950. It was alleged, in effect, that Bertha Kappel was a person of unsound mind. The petitioners were daughters of Bertha Kappel. An appearance was made for her, and answer filed. On July 15, 1950, Bertha Kappel presented in person and by counsel to M. H. Kepler, one of the judges of the district court for the Twelfth Judicial District, in which Butler County is located, an application asking the appointment of a guardian under section 670.5, the so-called “voluntary” guardian statute. • Judge Kepler thereupon made an order reciting the age of the applicant, seventy-six years; that she had appeared before him in chambers at North-wood, Iowa; that he had observed her and had considered and investigated the matter; that he found Bertha Kappel was not an idiot or a lunatic but was competent to make the application, and that she was a proper person to have such guardian appointed. He thereupon appointed-E. O. Wickham as her guardian, finding him to be a fit and proper person and in every way qualified. The order closes with this sentence: “And it is found expressly that. the prayer of said petition should be granted, it being for applicant’s best interests.”

[1024]*1024Thereupon the answer filed for Bertha Kappel in Mehmen et al. v. Kappel, above referred to, was amended by alleging the appointment of the guardian under section 670.5 as a complete defense to the petition for a guardian under 670.2. On July 27, 1950, the petitioners Annie Mehmen and the others in the first case filed their application to set aside the appointment of the guardian under section 670.5, alleging the prior pendency of the action brought by them, that Bertha Kappel was not capable of understanding the nature of her application under 670.5, but was induced to sign it by two sons, who were in a position to take advantage of her, and charging that their reason for procuring the appointment of E. O. "Wickham was to get a guardian “who would employ their counsel and would favor them all he could.” By an amendment filed on August 1, 1950, they alleged that at the time of the appointment of the guardian Bertha Kappel was a lunatic, and that at that time the issues were made up and the first case ready for trial. By a second amendment filed on August 7, 1950, the same petitioners charged that the two sons and their attorney formed a plan to induce Bertha Kappel to sign an instrument which she was incapable of understanding, and the signature to which was therefore not her genuine signature; that these sons "had had business dealings with their mother which would require evidence, and that they were interested in preventing an adjudication of her mental incompetency, so that they would not be excluded from telling of talks and -transactions with her. It was further alleged that the guardian appointed was a relative by marriage of the attorney procuring the appointment and had already undertaken to be partial to the sons as shown by a report on file.

It should be said here that the amendment to application to set aside the appointment does not specify in what way the guardian’s report was partial to the sons, or unfair to the daughters. The reference to it is therefore, of course, a mere conclusion. It is also to be noted that there is no showing, other than the claim made in the application and amendment, that the attorneys who appeared for Bertha Kappel in procuring the appointment and in subsequent proceedings in the trial court and in this appeal represented the sons. The latter appear here by other counsel.

[1025]*1025A third amendment to the application to set aside appointment, filed on August 14, 1950, alleged that the sons now claim an interest in certain personal property standing in the name of Bertha Kappel, valued in excess of ten thousand dollars; that they have filed a claim involving property of the value of many thousands of dollars; and the charge that the application was not in fact the application of Bertha Kappel but of her sons is repeated.

The application .to set aside the appointment and each of the amendments thereto'were attacked by Bertha Kappel by motions to strike, in which the guardian joined. The material and important grounds of the motions may be summarized thus: 1. That the allegations of the application and amendments are irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial; 2, the fact that an action was pending under section 670.2 would not bar Bertha Kappel from asking for the appointment of a guardian for herself under section 670.5; 3, it appears from the application that a guardian has been appointed and is now acting, and there is no reason why another guardian should be appointed; 4, that there is no sufficient allegation that E. O. Wickham is not a proper guardian, or that his appointment is not for the best interest of Bertha Kappel, as the .court specifically found in making the appointment; 5, that if the guardian appointed does not properly and fairly perform his duties he can be removed by the probate court under whose jurisdiction and control he is at all times; 6, that the attack upon the appointment is a collateral one, and is made by persons having no legal standing to make it, the ward being the sole person concerned; and 7, that much of the application and amendments thereto consist of opinions and conclusions of the .pleader.

Upon hearing of the motions to strike, counsel for applicants asked permission to introduce evidence upon the issues involved, particularly that of the sanity or soundness of mind of Bertha Kappel. This request was properly refused by the court since the questions were purely legal ones and the sufficiency of the application as amended could not be aided or detracted from by evidence. The court sustained the motions to strike, substantially upon the grounds above set forth; and so we have this appeal. We shall hereafter refer to the applicants, Annie Mehmen [1026]*1026et al., as plaintiffs, and Bertlia Kappel and the guardian, E. O. Wickham, as defendants.

I. Plaintiffs assign but one error relied upon for reversal; that the court was in error in sustaining the motions to strike the application to set aside appointment of guardian, and. amendments. It is their contention that they should have been permitted to proceed with their then pending action in which,_ by so-called “adversary” proceedings, they sought to show the mental unsoundness of their mother, the defendant Bertha Kappel. Unless we are to overrule the definite and well-considered holding of this court in Anderson v. Schwitzer, 236 Iowa 765, 20 N.W.2d 67, and much of the pronouncement and reasoning of Neidermyer v. Neidermyer, 237 Iowa 685, 22 N.W.2d 346, we must agree with the ruling of the trial court. We feel that the holdings in these cases are sound, that they have become understood as the proper interpretation of the law of the state, and that there is no reason, either in logic or practice, why they should be changed.

We held, in Anderson v. Schwitzer, supra, that the powers and duties of a guardian are the same, whether appointed under the provisions of section 670.2 or section 670.5. In this ease the appeal was likewise from an order and judgment sustaining a motion. We held that the motion — to dismiss — was properly susT tained.

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In Re Guardianship of Kappel
47 N.W.2d 825 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.W.2d 825, 242 Iowa 1021, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-kappel-iowa-1951.