In Re the Adoption of Kilby

298 N.W. 829, 230 Iowa 557
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 17, 1941
DocketNo. 45581.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 298 N.W. 829 (In Re the Adoption of Kilby) 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 the Adoption of Kilby, 298 N.W. 829, 230 Iowa 557 (iowa 1941).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The record herein is somewhat involved and the questions presented for our decision are unusual. However, the decisive question is clearly presented, namely, whether Hon. L. R. Sheets, Judge of the Municipal Court of the City of Marshall-town, was properly designated by the judges of the district court for the seventeenth judicial district to act as judge of the juvenile court in Marshall County, pursuant to section 3607 of the Code, 1939.

The questions herein arise upon appeal from a decree for the adoption of one Roger Kilby, a minor, by Marie Frazey. Her petition for such adoption was resisted by the Iowa Board of Control of State Institutions, which asserted that said Roger Kilby had been committed to the Iowa Soldiers’ Orphans Home at Davenport, Iowa, by Judge Sheets, acting as judge of the juvenile court in Marshall County, and, accordingly, pursuant to the provisions of section 10501.3 of the Code, 1939, the consent of the Board of Control was necessary before such adoption could be had. The trial court found and determined that Judge Sheets had not been properly designated judge of the juvenile court in Marshall County, was a mere usurper, acted wholly without jurisdiction, that his order of commitment was void, subject to the collateral attack here made upon it, and, accordingly, that the Board of Control should be ignored herein. We hold that the court erred and that its decree must be reversed. In order to demonstrate how the question arises herein and why the court erred in its decision, it is necessary to review the record in some detail.

On November 24, 1924, the judges of the district court for the seventeenth judicial district were James W. Willett and B. F. Cummings and the judge of the municipal court of Marshallfown was B. O. Tankersley. On that day said district judges signed and filed an order by which “the Judge of the Municipal *559 Court of Marshalltown, Iowa, is designated by the undersigned Judges of the 17th Judicial District of Iowa, as Judge of the Juvenile Court in and for Marshall County, Iowa, and said City of Marshalltown, and shall have jurisdiction of ali Juvenile Court matters, both Civil and Criminal, within said County and City, as provided by law.”

On April 9, 1929, the judges of the seventeenth judicial district were B. F. Cummings and Clarence Nichols and L. R. Sheets became judge of the municipal court of Marshalltown. On that day there was signed and filed by the said district judges an instrument by which said judges did “designate L. R. Sheets, Judge of the Municipal Court in and for Marshalltown, Iowa, as Judge of the Juvenile Court to handle juvenile-cases arising in the city of Marshalltown, and in the County of Marshall, all in the State of Iowa.”

Judge Cummings resigned in 1930. Judge Tankersley was appointed to succeed him, has served since then and is now serving as such judge. In 1932, Carl B. Stiger succeeded Judge Nichols and served until 1936 when he resigned to become a member of this court. Tie was succeeded by C. E. Walters who served until January 1, 1937, when he was succeeded by L. J. Kirkland, who is still serving with Judge Tankersley. The population of Marshalltown exceeds 15,000 and that of Marshall County exceeds 35,000.

The clerk of the district court testified that the designations made on November 29, 1924, and April 9, 1929, were the only designations that he was able to locate in the records of his office pertaining to the designation of judge of the juvenile court in and for Marshall County, and that he had been in office since January 1, 1931. Judge Tankersley testified that he had no recollection of ever having signed any designation for judge of the juvenile court in and for Marshall County since he had been in office.

Judge Sheets is still serving as judge of the municipal court of Marshalltown. During the twelve years he has served in that capacity, the judges of the district court have frequently referred matters to (lie municipal court and the juvenile division thereof. Both Judge Tankersley and Judge Kirkland have referred such matters to Judge Sheets. The juvenile work has *560 been of considerable volume in the municipal court. Judge Sheets averages about eight hours a day on such work. He received the Community Service Award for such work. From January 1, 1931, to November 4, 1940, no juvenile court cases were handled in Marshall County by the judges of the seventeenth judicial district court.

On February 8, 1940, a juvenile complaint was filed in Judge Sheets ’ court involving Roger Kilby. Roy L. Pell, counsel for appellee herein, appeared in that case. On March 1, 1940, the assistant chief justice of this court .entered an order that the case be heard by Hon. Joseph E. Meyer, judge of the ninth judicial district. Judge Sheets was called as a witness by appellee and, on cross-examination, described the events leading up to the entry of such order thus:

“With reference to Exhibit ‘D’ being a designation of Judge Jos. E. Meyer to hear a case, entitled State of Iowa ex rel. Williams v. Kilby, Juvenile Case No. 415, Mr. Pell approached me in the court room. This was in municipal court. He told me he would rather have some other judge hear it. I told him that would be very satisfactory. He said something about it being-embarrassing to him if he tried it to me, and I told him I would try to get some other judge to hear it. And then I suggested Judge Tankersley and he agreed that would be satisfactory. I later called Judge Tankersley and he agreed to hear it. I talked to him a couple of times to determine the date because I wanted 1o try it as soon as possible. The judge was busy and couldn’t select the date. Then about three weeks later Judge Tankersley came to me in the hall of the Municipal Building- and told me * * * he didn’t want to hear it. I then suggested Judge Kirkland and Judge Tankersley told me that Judge Kirkland was very busy and couldn’t hear it. The next day I called Mr. Pell and told him that Judge Tankersley had backed out * * * and that he told me that Judge Kirkland couldn’t hear it. I then talked to him of getting one of the judges of the municipal court at Des Moines to substitute for me, but the judges down there didn’t handle juvenile matters. Then I said Judge Meyer received a community service award for his juvenile work and although I wasn’t per *561 sonally acquainted with him I would call him and ask him. Mr. Pell agreed to that. Judge Meyer agreed to come. Pell said it would be all right to let Judge Meyer hear it. Judge Meyer suggested I get a.designation from the Supreme Court. I do not believe that Mr. Pell agreed to the actual designation. The actual assignment by the Supreme Court. I either called or wrote Frederic Miller and lie sent the designation up. Subsequent to the designation there was a hearing in the'juvenile division of the municipal court of Marshalltown, Judge Meyer presiding. Mr. Pell appeared at that time. ’ ’

There was no objection made to the jurisdiction of Judge Meyer to preside over such proceedings. Both parties were represented by counsel.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Iowa Employment Security Commission v. Marshall County
49 N.W.2d 829 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1951)
Davis, Prob. Off. v. Collins
216 S.W.2d 807 (Texas Supreme Court, 1949)
In Re Adoption of Alley
14 N.W.2d 742 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 N.W. 829, 230 Iowa 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-adoption-of-kilby-iowa-1941.