Miller v. Miller

23 N.W.2d 760, 237 Iowa 978, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 29, 1946
DocketNo. 46873.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 23 N.W.2d 760 (Miller v. Miller) 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
Miller v. Miller, 23 N.W.2d 760, 237 Iowa 978, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 326 (iowa 1946).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

This action was instituted in December 1945, for the appointment of a guardian of the property of W. W. Miller under section 670.2, Code of Iowa, 1946 (section 12614, Code of 1939). Plaintiffs are children of defendant. Another son, Clarence, was a witness for plaintiffs, and a daughter, Mary Berney, assisted defendant. The amended petition alleged that during the past year and one .half defendant had become a person of such unsoundness of mind as to be incompetent to manage his business affairs.

A jury was waived and the cause was tried to the court on the issue of the appointment of a permanent guardian. From the judgment appointing such guardian defendant has appealed.

Until 1943 appellant engaged in farming near Cummings in Warren county. He was industrious, careful, and successful. His wife died some years ago. Since 1943 he has lived most of the time at the home of his daughter, Mary Berney, who is in the real-estate business in Des Moines. At the time of .the trial he was seventy-eight years old and his vision and hearing had become impaired.

His property then consisted of his one-hundred-sixty-acre-farm in Warren county, a house in West Des Moines which rented for $30 per' month, a California chicken ranch, a Ford truck, five war savings bonds, each worth $750 plus interest, rent notes, notes of several of his children, and a small balance in a checking account.

Appellant’s physician, Dr. Sternagel, testified he first observed a change in appellant’s mental condition about four years previously when appellant appeared unable to grasp the idea why he should wear a truss or how it should be worn. Later he noticed appellant’s mental deterioration as evidenced by “the forgetfulness that he had paid his bills at the office, the inability to remember when he had an appointment, and the failure to call for prescriptions that were left for him at *981 the drugstore.” The doctor testified he made further observations and arrived at certain professional opinions. He advised appellant “he should have someone to help him with his financial affairs, and particularly when traveling a long ways from home.” He testified that was his professional opinion and conclusion. The doctor testified he had .an opinion as to whether or not appellant was suffering from cerebral arteriosclerosis. He did not state that opinion in so many words. He testified the existence of that ailment would affect an elderly person’s competency to conduct business generally and that it would have a bearing upon appellant’s ability to drive an automobile only as it affects the reasoning, hearing, sight, and judgment.

Dr. Henry, who examined appellant, testified he had defi-' nite degenerative changes ■ in his nervous system and that although people of his age have senile changes they do not have the degree of. changes appellant has; he has pathological changes in his nervous system.

“Summary: This man, seventy-eight, is showing senile changes both physically and mentally. His nervous system shows degenerative changes. It would appear that the nervous changes were aggravated by an anemia, possibly a pernicious anemia. It appears he is reaching a state of moderate decline in his mental capacity. These changes are shown by his rather childish resignation, tendency to become detached and forgetful. His memory for many events is good, but his dependability to be alert to situations is questionable. The diagnosis is, anemia, possibly pernicious in type, senile deterioration.”

The doctor testified senile deterioration lessens the competency of an individual and that appellant’s trustfulness and childish manner indicated senile deterioration in which he had a, tendency to efface himself and follow the direction of others, rather trusting implicitly without asserting himself.

. The testimony- of appellees and their lay witnesses referred largely to appellant’s loss of memory, judgment, and responsibility. Some occurrences shown of record are the following :

Appellant was in California during the winter of 1944-1945. He instructed his son-in-law Collins to sell his com. *982 Collins did so and sent appellant the buyer’s cheek for $1,200. A month- later appellant wrote Collins to sell the corn. An investigation disclosed appellant had cashed the check. Considerable correspondence followed before appellant became satisfied he had receivéd the cheek.

He bought ■ a .California chicken ranch, on a lot fifty-five feet wide, for about-$3,500. Iiis brother, who lived near by, had .told him.the seller had been offering i-t for $1,250 and warned him not to “get stuck.” Appellant says the price he paid included certain equipment and chickens not included in the $-1,250 price. After buying more chickens and making certain repairs and improvements he disposed of his flock and rented the buildings.

In the summer of 1945 appellant, after carrying for months two checks amounting to several hundred dollars, threw them into a wastebasket, from which they were afterward retrieved by Mary Berney.

- Appellant sold and. was paid for an article of furniture. A day or two later, he attempted to sell the same article to the same person. • ' .

Appellant held a; recorded $150 note of appellee Mabel Laughlin and her husband. He. tried to collect the interest before it was due. Later he requested and was given a new note and he returned the old note. Then he tore up the new note, saying he had it recorded, which was incorrect. Still later he asked for the note and was reminded he had surrendered the old note and destroyed the new note.

Appellant deposited a' cheek for $1,000 with Judge Lin-ville with a bid on a farm which was to be sold under court order. He does not remember giving this check or whether it was returned to him.

Appellant imagines his son-in-law Collins stole his will from him at a bank. The record shows the will is. and has been held by the- attorney who .prepared it for appellant and never has been in the possession of any other person.

During the past few years he has had substantial receipts from rentals and from sales of property. However, in 1945 several of his checks were returned on account of insufficient *983 funds. On one sucb occasion he cashed a $750 war savings bond to replenish his account, saying to his daughter Mrs. Laughlin, “don’t tell Mary.”

In 1945 appellant had a series of automobile and truck accidents. His driver’s license, which was later revoked,' permitted daytime driving only but he drove at all hours. He had let his automobile insurance lapse but -Mary Berney • discovered the lapsation card in his pocket and sent a check -to revive it. His last accident was about October 28th, when he started to drive from Des Moines to Cedar Rapids. He testified :

“I was driving in the nighttime I couldn’t get anybody to go with me, I wanted to go pheasant hunting so I just started out.”

He arrived at the home of his son Clarence in Cedar Rapids with blood on his face and clothing and refused to tell what had happened, “because you will tell Mary.” Cater he said he had hit a truck, near Marshalltown, and wrecked his car. The next day he returned to Des Moines by bus.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.W.2d 760, 237 Iowa 978, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-miller-iowa-1946.