Neidermyer v. Neidermyer

22 N.W.2d 346, 237 Iowa 685, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 303
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 2, 1946
DocketNo. 46832.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 22 N.W.2d 346 (Neidermyer v. Neidermyer) 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
Neidermyer v. Neidermyer, 22 N.W.2d 346, 237 Iowa 685, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 303 (iowa 1946).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Plaintiff is defendant’s'son. He filed petition on September 17, 1945, for the appointment of a temporary and permanent guardian of his mother’s property under sections 12614, 12620, and 12621, Iowa Code, 1939. Before hear-ing was held on the prayer for temporary guardianship defendant filed resistance thereto and also filed voluntary application for guardianship under Code section 12617.

Two proceedings were thus inaugurated: one at law, and in a sense adversary, upon plaintiff’s petition, requiring notice and hearing (Code sections 12620 and 12621); the other voluntary and in probaté but ex parte (section 12618, Iowa Code, 1939). No formal consolidation was ordered. However, defendant pleaded her voluntary application as a part of her resistance to appointment of temporary guardian and during the hearing on plaintiff’s petition (September 27 and 28, 1945) offered it in evidence and asked the court to rule on it. Thereupon the court said:

“My best judgment is that the other case was filed first, and I want it disposed of before I make any ruling in probate, so I will hear you now in the original ease at law for the appoint- ‘ ment of a guardian.”

At the close of the evidence the trial court recited the commencement of both proceedings, expressed doubt as to *687 whether it could entertain defendant’s application when the other proceeding was pending, and ordered the appointment of a temporary guardian based upon a finding “that the defendant, owing to her physical condition” was “physically unfit to transact her ordinary business affairs with discretion.” Defendant’s voluntary application was then in the same order denied “because the court has heretofore appointed a temporary guardian.” (Italics supplied.) There was no finding of mental incompetence. Defendant having obtained leave under Rule 332, Iowa Rules of Civil Procedure, appeals from the entire order.

We think the practical result was the same as if a formal consolidation of the two proceedings had been made. The hearing involved considerations pertinent both to the propriety of appointing a temporary guardian and to the matter of appointing a permanent guardian upon defendant’s voluntary application.

I. We have recently held there is no difference between the powers and duties of a guardian appointed upon the ward’s own application and those of one appointed in proceedings instituted by another. Anderson v. Schweitzer, 236 Iowa 765, 20 N. W. 2d 67. The texts of the applicable Code sections 'are quoted verbatim in that case.

In justice to the trial court and attorneys herein it should be said that opinion had not been announced at the time the instant case was decided. There was until then apparent support for the idea that the voluntary guardianship in some respects differed from the involuntary.

II. The doctrine of Anderson v. Schweitzer is important here. Since in both kinds of proceedings guardianship with the same powers and duties is sought there should be no conflict of interest or of jurisdiction. We have referred to the proceeding upon plaintiff’s petition as “in a sense” adversary. It is such only in form. There are in fact no adverse interests to be determined. Whether the proceeding be upon the ward’s own initiative or upon the petition of another the sole' interested party is the one over whose property guardianship is sought. Timonds v. Hunter, 169 Iowa 598, 608, 151 N. W. 961; Huffman v. Beamer, 198 Iowa 1113, 1117, 197 N. *688 W. 476; Coomes v. Mayer, 201 Iowa 405, 205 N. W. 645; Perry v. Roberts, 206 Iowa 303, 220 N. W. 85. Code section 12617 expressly makes the “best interest of said applicant” paramount in proceedings under it.

It follows that the trial court was in error in assuming that because the proceedings upon plaintiff’s petition were first begun and were pending when defendant filed her application the latter must be denied. The first inquiry should have been to determine in the ward’s best interest whether trial was necessary upon plaintiff’s petition; in other words, to determine first whether appointment might not properly be made upon defendant’s voluntary application.

III. Code section 12617 entitles the one petitioning for guardianship over his own property to have a guardian appointed unless he is an idiot or lunatic.

We have pointed out that the trial court here made no finding of mental unsoundness. The appointment of the temporary guardian was expressly based upon defendant’s physical unfitness. We need not determine or speculate upon what the legislature meant by the words “idiot” and “lunatic.” Even if it intended to exclude from the operation of the section everyone of unsound mind, the court under this record must have found this defendant entitled to its benefits. We think it apparent such would have been the decision if the voluntary proceedings had not been pending.

Defendant was a widow seventy-eight years old. She lived a mile or two north of Missouri Valley, Iowa, at the farm home of her widowed sister, Anna Wehrlie, who was “up in the sixties, or close to seventy” years old. Their brother, Charles Longmier, a widower “seventy some” years old, lived there also. Mrs. Wehrlie’s son, Clark Wehrlie, operated the farm but lived in town. The two sisters and their brother lived alone except as Clark occasionally stayed out there overnight.

The only witness who unqualifiedly testified defendant was of unsound mind was' her daughter, Ella Leland, who livéd in Omaha. Though not a nominal plaintiff Mrs. Leland had agreed in advance to the commencement of the proceedings by her brother.

*689 According to her testimony Clark Wehrlie came down after-her when her mother had a stroke in August 1945. She imme-' diately proceeded to care for her mother and to clean up the house generally. In the course, of her labors after she had been there over a week she found a box that her father had made for her mother; It was unlocked and contained a lot of money in a white sack: “there was bills, bills and bills.” The next day the box was gone and she found Clark Wehrlie had taken it to his house in Missouri Valley. Later, at the insistence of the witness and her nephew, George Cans fern er (son of her deceased sister), and' upon their threat of sending for the sheriff, the box was put in the bank. She says that at some previous time (“that, wasn’t so very far back”) her mother had forty-four thousand dollars.

The witness detailed a conversation she overheard in which Mrs. Wehrlie said, “Listen, Mary [defendant] is going to give Clark everything.” When the witness asked her mother if it was true “that the Wehrlies were going to get her money,” her mother answered “Ves, Clark is going to get what she had.” When Mrs. Wehrlie ordered the daughter to leave the house, defendant made no objection and said, “they don’t want you to have what I got. ’ ’

The witness also, said she heard her aunt telephoning the bank that defendant wanted the box brought back: “Mary wants this box back, and if you don’t bring this box back she is going crazy”; and she testified her mother heard the telephone conversation and she said she did not want the box left at the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.W.2d 346, 237 Iowa 685, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neidermyer-v-neidermyer-iowa-1946.