In Re Guardianship of Luft

97 N.E.2d 561, 91 Ohio App. 409, 59 Ohio Law. Abs. 33, 45 Ohio Op. 333, 1950 Ohio App. LEXIS 566
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1950
Docket4423
StatusPublished

This text of 97 N.E.2d 561 (In Re Guardianship of Luft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals 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 Luft, 97 N.E.2d 561, 91 Ohio App. 409, 59 Ohio Law. Abs. 33, 45 Ohio Op. 333, 1950 Ohio App. LEXIS 566 (Ohio Ct. App. 1950).

Opinions

OPINION

By HORNBECK, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law -from a judgment of the Probate Court of Franklin County denying an application of the ward for the termination of the guardianship.

The errors are assigned under four headings which may be encompassed within two: First, in permitting the guardian to appear and contest the ward’s application for termination of the guardianship; second, that the order of the Probate Court is contrary to law, is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is against the manifest weight of the evidence.

The first assignment is not well made. It was discretionary with the trial judge to permit the guardian in the interest of the ward’s estate to appear and contest his removal, introduce testimony and cross-examine witnesses.

To properly appreciate the other questions presented, it will be necessary to examine the proceedings. The order from which the appeal is taken was made pursuant to an application of the ward in which she recites that “Robert R. Shaw was appointed guardian of her person and estate on the ground of physical and mental incompetency, that while she *34 is physically ill and requires medical and nursing service, with all of which she is well provided, she is not mentally incompetent and was and is capable of looking after and taking care of her property; and that letters of appointment of said guardian were improperly issued.” The prayer is for termination of the guardianship.

The trial judge in his written opinion passing upon the application very properly noted, that the statement that the guardian had been appointed for the person and estate of the ward on the ground of physical and mental incompetency, was not supported by the facts. The guardian was named for the estate only of the ward and because she was physically incompetent.

The journal entry further recites “that the said Nina Luft signed a written consent consenting to the appointment” and such written consent admittedly was made in open court and is found among the files in the transcript.

Two facts stand out in this record and one is almost as certain as the other, viz., that at the time the guardian was appointed the ward was not mentally incompetent, and she would have been entitled to a court order to that effect; second, that she is badly physically incapacitated because suffering from Parkinson’s disease.

Although the application for the termination of the guardianship was grounded upon the claim of irregularity in the appointment only, the trial judge in one of the final entries, not only determines that the letters of appointment of the guardian were not improperly issued but also that the necessity for the continuánce of the guardianship still exists. In the presentation of the appeal and the briefs counsel have taken wide latitude and given consideration to both matters determined by the court. We therefore in reviewing the judgment assume that by common consent both grounds for termination of the guardianship provided in §10507-61 GC were tried and adjudicated.

Sec. 10507-61 GC provides in part that upon proper notice

“and satisfactory proof that the necessity for the guardianship no longer exists, or that the letters of appointment were improperly issued, the Probate Court shall order that the guardianship of an incompetent, * * * terminate, and shall make an appropriate entry upon the Journal.”

The guardianship likewise could be terminated if it appeared that there was no necessity for the appointment of the guardian when made.

*35 One unusual aspect of this case is that the person who preferred the original charges against Mrs. Luft affords no testimony of his own or of any other person on the application to terminate the guardianship.

Under the statute §10507-2 GC, which provides that the Probate Court shall appoint a guardian of the person, or of the estate, or of both, of an * * * incompetent (except that if the incompetency be due to physical disability or infirmity the consent of the incompetent must first be obtained), * * *; provided the person for whom the guardian is to be appointed be a resident of the county, or has a legal settlement or residence therein, a prerequisite to the appointment of the guardian is that it is necessary. That part of the section in brackets was enacted following the decision of our Supreme Court in Schafer v. Haller, 108 Oh St 322, declaring unconstitutional the provision of former §10989 GC, making physical disability or infirmity a ground for the appointment of a guardian. The practical effect of this added language in §10507-2 GC is to place in the hands of the ward, when necessity for the appointment of a guardian appears, the power to select the guardian. This is true because at any time prior to the appointment the applicant can withdraw the consent. So that here it becomes vital to a correct decision of this appeal to decide two determinative factors: first, the necessity originally and the continuance of the necessity on the application for termination of the guardianship; and second, the reality of the consent of Mrs. Luft.

*36 *35 Upon both of these matters if we had the right to determine them originally upon the evidence before us we would hold that all of them should be resolved in favor of Mrs. Luft. But we recognize that we are hearing this appeal on law only and have no such power to weigh and determine the evidence as upon de novo hearing. However, upon the development of the testimony on the application for the termination of the guardianship we are of opinion that the refusal to grant the application was against the manifest weight of. the evidence. The development upon which we rely was not before the Probate Judge at the time of the original appointment and no criticism can properly be directed against the action taken at that time. It does not appear, nor can we find that the Probate Judge fully appreciated the influences which must have actuated Mrs. Luft in signing the consent to the appointment of the guardian. She did not come into court on her own motion. She was forced to come in upon two charges: first, that she was a mentally incompetent person; and second, that she was physically incompetent to conduct her own business affairs. It must be assumed that upon *36 the informal hearing the Court could properly consider, prior to the consent of Mrs. Luft, but one aspect of the application for the appointment of a guardian, viz., mental incompetency. Mrs. Luft had reason to believe, though it may not have been the fact, that the person who filed the affidavits seeking the appointment of the guardian was unfriendly to her and her interests. She also might well have been apprehensive that as a result of these unfriendly acts the Court might appoint a guardian for her upon the ground that she was an insane person. Finally, from her subsequent conduct it is reasonable to conclude that she did not appreciate the full implication of her consent to the appointment.

In the state of mind of Mrs.

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97 N.E.2d 561, 91 Ohio App. 409, 59 Ohio Law. Abs. 33, 45 Ohio Op. 333, 1950 Ohio App. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-luft-ohioctapp-1950.