O'Neill v. Read

179 Iowa 1208
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 14, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 179 Iowa 1208 (O'Neill v. Read) 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
O'Neill v. Read, 179 Iowa 1208 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Gaynor, O. J.

*• AND ment' teney. compe' Alice Ferguson died intestate in Pottawattamie County, on the 16th. day of April, 1915. She left a small estate consisting of personal property, and an unliquidated claim for damages against Pottawattamie County. She left surviving her a husband, one Harvey Ferguson, and two minor children, Ruth E. and Estelle Ferguson, aged, respectively, three years and eighteen months. On the 20th day of April, Mason and Lizzie Pauley, father and mother of the deceased, Alice Ferguson, filed a petition in the district court of Pottawattamie County, asking that letters of administration issue to C. H. Read, defendant herein, and letters were issued accordingly. He qualified and gave bond, and entered upon the discharge of his duty. On the 7th day of May, 1915, Harvey Ferguson, husband of the deceased Alice, filed his petition in the district court of Pottawattamie County, alleging that he was informed and believed that C. H. Read of Avoca had been appointed administrator of the estate of his deceased wife; that he (the petitioner) was the husband of said decedent, and is entitled to make application for appointment as administrator within a period of 20 days, commencing with the burial of the decedent; that the parents of decedent were not entitled to ask for appointment until after the [1210]*1210expiration of said time; that the petitioner desires the appointment of Bead to be set aside and held for naught; that letters be granted to one Joe O’Neill, who is a suitable nerson to be appointed administrator. It appears further that, on the 30th day of April, 1915, Joe O’Neill was duly appointed guardian of -the property of the minor children of Alice Ferguson, and was tlieir duly appointed guardian at the time of the filing of the petition to set aside the appointment of Read as administrator.

Upon the trial it was stipulated as follows: That Mason and Lizzie Pauley are the father and mother of Alice Ferguson; that Alice Ferguson left surviving her Harvey Ferguson, her husband; that, at the time of her death, he was confined in the hospital for the insane at Clarinda; that he was adjudged insane by the board of commissioners of insanity prior to that time, and since has been, and is now, an inmate of said hospital under the law, without any change in his legal status; that Alice Ferguson left also surviving her two minor children, aged, respectively, three years and eighteen months; that J. E. O’Neill, plaintiff herein, was, on the 30th day of April, 1915, appointed guardian of the property of said children upon petition of Harvey Ferguson, who was then confined in the hospital aforesaid and who has ever since been confined in said hospital under a warrant of commitment; that Joe O’Neill is now acting as guardian of such property of said children, and was at the time of the filing of the petition for the removal of C. H. Read; that Harvey Ferguson, at the time of the death of Alice Ferguson, and ever since and during all the times herein mentioned, was confined in the hospital for the insane; that he was adjudged insane on the 31st day of March, 1915.

On this showing, the court dismissed the petition of Harvey Ferguson, and confirmed the appointment of Read [1211]*1211as administrator of the estate of Alice Ferguson. From this finding, Joe O’Neill has appealed.

Section 3297, Code, 1897, provides:

“Where an executor is not appointed by will, administration shall be granted:

“1. To the husband or wife of the deceased;

“2. To his next of kin;

“3. To his creditors;

“4. To any other person whom the court may select.” Section 3298, Code, 1897, provides:

“To each of the above classes, in succession, a period of 20 days, commencing with the burial of the deceased, is allowed within which to apply for administration.”

Harvey Ferguson comes within the first, and to him was allowed twenty days in which to apply for appointment. The statute gives to him this right. The children come within the second class. They are the next of kin. There are none appearing in the third class. The record does not disclose that there were any creditors. Read comes within the fourth class. See In re Estate of Weaver 140 Iowa 615.

Is there no limit on the right of the husband to- be appointed under this statute? The statute itself fixes no limitation upon the right. The statute, however, was intended to confer a right upon one who is capable of exercising the right when conferred. It could not have been the thought of the legislature that the court should, under all circumstances, recognize this right and grant the power to exercise it under all circumstances. To so construe t-he statute would force upon the court that which would, under peculiar conditions, be destructive of all the rights sought to be protected. The veriest imbecile or idiot, coming within the wording of the statute, would be entitled to receive from the court the power to administer upon the estate of a dead person, even though incapable of attending [1212]*1212to even his own personal wants. We think that the legislar ture intended to grant this exclusive right within twenty days to the husband only in the event the husband applied within that time and was competent and able to dischai’ge the duties to which his appointment assigned him.

As said in Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Gould, 64 Iowa 343, at page 345:

“For proper reasons, based upon the unfitness or inability of the persons designated in the first three of the classes, as presented by the statute, just quoted, administration may be granted to someone of the class next named; and, if no one capable and fitted for the discharge of the duty is found therein, it may be imposed upon persons within the fourth class. It is competent for the probate court to determine the propriety of the appointment of any person who is presented therefor.”

In the case at bar, Harvey Ferguson was insane; confined in the Hospital for insane; legally dead. He was incompetent to discharge his own business, and unfit to be trusted with the business of others. He could not have been appointed himself because of his disability. The appointment of O’Neill is asked upon the petition of one who, because of his mental condition, was incapable of assuming the responsibility himself, and therefore incapable of selecting one to act for him in his stead.

The second class was the children of Alice. They were the next of kin,- — two babies, one three years old and the other eighteen months old, — both disqualified because of their tender years.

The third class was the creditors. The record does not disclose that there were any.

Read comes clearly within the fourth class. His qualification for the office is not questioned, except as it is claimed that there are three classes entitléd to precedence over him.

[1213]*1213In The Estate of O’Brien, 63 Iowa 622, 624, this court had occasion to say something which is very apropos to the situation here, and said:

“While there are no restrictions or limitations in the statute on the right of the widow to administer on her husband’s estate, yet it is quite apparent, we think, that of necessity the court has at least some discretion in such cases. For the wife may be insane, or otherwise clearly incompetent.

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Bluebook (online)
179 Iowa 1208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneill-v-read-iowa-1917.