In Re Guardianship of Vogelpohl

53 N.W.2d 151, 243 Iowa 701, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 6, 1952
Docket48024
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 N.W.2d 151 (In Re Guardianship of Vogelpohl) 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 Vogelpohl, 53 N.W.2d 151, 243 Iowa 701, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 506 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

The record discloses many unusual and bizarre incidents which demonstrated the need of a competent and honest guardian to conserve the property of these wards and to provide them with proper care. The facts are controlling. The parents of the wards, in the early days, settled on a farm in Crawford County, near the present village of Ricketts. The two daughters and three sons were born to the parents. The family had few outside contacts. They worked hard, lived plainly, spent little on pleasures or education, and saved much. The father and mother and all of the children but the two girls and Louie (a son)' died several years ago. -None of the children married. Mary and Anna and Louie lived on the farm and operated it together. The family had acquired nine hundred and sixty-sis acres of land, made up of five farms, and personal property amounting to about $150,000. Louie died in September 1945. Mary and Anna were his only heirs. They thus came into the ownership and possession of all the Vogelpohl property. They continued to live in the old farm home. They were feeble in body, unstable of mind, illiterate, and apparently easily influenced.

Arthur TI. Sievert, the undertaker at Charter Oak, had charge of some of the earlier funerals in the Vogelpohl family and acted in the same capacity at Louie’s death. John Meyer, a son of August Meyer and a nephew of Adolph Meyer, who were *703 first cousins and nearest kin of Mary and Anna, lived on bis farm three quarters of a mile distant from the Yogelpohl home. After consultation with his father but without discussion with his Uncle Adolph, John Meyer, on September 11, 1945, a few days after the burial of Louie, took Anna Vogelpohl with him to Denison, where they consulted an attorney, Mrs. P. W. Harding, who prepared a petition for the appointment of J ohn Meyer as administrator of Louie’s estate. Anna, who was the only one of the girls who could write, signed this petition. Though the' record does not disclose that Sievert suggested to John Meyer that he become administrator, he soon became very active in assisting Meyer in the administration of the estate and so continued during the three years preceding its closing in 1948. Mrs. Harding was a witness in the trial and testified that Mr. Sievert demanded of her a share of the attorney fees she was receiving from the estate, and upon her refusal she was discharged at a meeting with Mr. Sievert and Mr. Meyer. The latter testified that upon the recommendation of Mr. Sievert he appointed Charles Johnson as attorney for the estate, and later also appointed Leonard Fromm.

The value of Louie’s estate, according to John Meyer, was “roughly seventy or eighty thousand dollars.” Meyer also testified:

“I was allowed $8000 as administrator fee. Part of this was given to Mr. Sievert for his assistance. I don’t recall, but he didn’t get half of this fee. * * * I maintain two accounts: one ■for the Yogelpohl ladies, -which was a small account on which they drew for their own personal needs, and another account which I used as attorney-in-fact to conduct their business. I do not recall exactly how much I paid myself. During the period the estate Avas in probate I received $250 a month and I do remember this fee schedule was followed after the estate was closed to the present date. [The trial was in June 1951.] I paid Mr. Sievert for his assistance out of the $250 a month fee which I paid to myself.”

On March 22, 1947, J ohn Meyer procured from both Mary and Anna a separate but identical power of attorney appointing him the agent of each “to manage all my personal and business *704 affairs, farms and otherwise, including the power to make leases and contracts; to hire and fire; to buy .or sell farm products, produce, livestock and feed, as the occasion requires; to request, demand and collect, by suit, settlement, or otherwise, all rents, notes, mortgages, moneys, or debts of every kind which are now due, or shall become due, owing or belonging to me; to receive and give receipts for all moneys taken in from whatever source; to pay all taxes * *.*; to buy all things necessary for the proper upkeep of my property and my personal welfare; to make such investments for me as men of prudence, discretion, and intelligence would exercise in the management of their own affairs, providing, however, that he shall not be permitted to make personal loans of any kind on anything or to buy real estate or mortgages of any kind; also, reserving unto myself the right to grant, bargain, sell or convey, any of my real property, providing, however, that, in the event of any such sale, deed, mortgage, or otherwise, the papers therefor shall be signed and joined in by my said attorney, John Meyer, it being understood that neither he nor T alone may sell, convey, mortgage or otherwise dispose of said real property; otherwise giving and granting unto my said attorney full power and authority to do and perform all and every act and thing whatsoever requisite and necessary to be done in and about the premises, as fully to all intents and purposes as I might or could do, if present at the doing thereof, with full power of substitution and revocation, reserving the right to revoke this power of attorney at my pleasure; hereby ratifying all that my said attorney or his substitute shall lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.” The power of attorney with Mary’s signature, which was written by Anna, was witnessed by Mr. Sievert.

The assessment roll for Mary and Anna for 1950, signed by John Meyer as attorney in fact, showed moneys and credits of $25,000, real-estate mortgages of $37,000, or a total of $62,000, and for 1951, $14,000 in the bank, $25,000 promissory notes, $18,000 real-estate mortgages, and $2500 chattel mortgages.

On the “-day of June 1948” Anna and Mary signed a receipt acknowledging that as sole heirs of Louie they had received in the final distribution of his estate from John Meyer, administrator, full payment of all sums due them from said estate. Concerning this John Meyer testified:

*705 “Tlie signatures which appear on. this document, were both signed by Anna Vogelpohl, and Mary just watched. At that time I represented them under a power of attorney from them, and I have continued to handle the business under that power of attorney so that I never actually' turned over the estate to them. * * * They agreed that I could sign checks for the payment of my services. Anna does have a small checking account of her own.”

On June 7, 1950, Mr. Sievert procured a separate power of attorney from Anna and Mary, the body of which is identical with those given to John Meyer, and set out above. They were prepared by Charles Johnson. Mr. Sievert testified:

“I have a contract for funeral services .for the Vogelpohl ladies that was entered into on or about April 13, 1950. It was drawn up in Johnson’s office in Denison, Iowa. John Meyer had the contract written up under their instructions. It- was signed ■by them at their home when taken there by John Meyer; I.was not present. The contract calls for merchandise and funeral services in the sum of $4250 each.” ■ , . .

In the winter of 1950-1951 Mary and Anna were living alone on the farm.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.W.2d 151, 243 Iowa 701, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-vogelpohl-iowa-1952.