79 P. 75 | Idaho | 1904
This case arose out of the facts and transactions disclosed in the case of Pine v. Callahan, 8 Idaho, 684, 71 Pac. 473. The appellant, Thomas J. Purcell, having been named by the purported will of John C. Brady, deceased, as the testamentary guardian of the minors, Arva and Elmer Brady, applied to the probate court of Kootenai county, and was on the twentieth day of July, 1901, appointed as general guardian of the persons and estates of the said minors. At the time of the death of John C. Brady, these two minor children were living and residing with their father in Kootenai county. Their mother had died some two years previous. The domicile of the minors was not changed after the death of their father, and still continued to be in Kootenai county at the time of the appointment of the appellant as general guardian. On the twenty-ninth day of July, 1901, it seems that -Frank Pine, a resident of the state of Iowa, who is named in this proceeding as the guardian of the minors, was appointed by the district court of Keokuk county, Iowa, as guardian of the persons and property of the minors, Arva and Elmer Brady. It appears that some time between the twentieth and twenty-ninth days of July, 1901, the Iowa guardian, Frank Pine, who is a maternal uncle of the minors, in some surreptitious way, or at least not by an order of any Idaho court, removed the children from this state and took them to the state of Iowa. It is clear that Pine was neither the natural nor testamentary guardian of these minors, and it is doubtful if, under the facts in this case, he had any power or authority to change their domicile, although he removed them physically from the jurisdiction of the domicile. (Lamar v. Micou, 112 U. S. 452, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 221, 28 L. ed. 751.) It is shown by the record that the maternal and paternal grandparents of these minors were all living at the time of these transactions, but it nowhere appears that any of the grandparents ever changed the domicile of the minors or participated therein. Soon after the death of Brady, John C. Callahan, who was named as executor in
We do not understand how the unauthorized removal of the wards from the jurisdiction of the domicile to another state or the appointment of a guardian by a court of a foreign jurisdiction can oust the courts of this state of the jurisdiction which they had once acquired. There is no doubt but that when the wards were domiciled within this state and their only property, these insurance policies, were within the state, the probate court had jurisdiction to appoint a general guardian and to direct and control his conduct as such guardian. After having made such appointment the court retained jurisdiction for all purposes in connection therewith until his accounts are rendered and he is legally discharged. If the domicile of the wards should be legally transferred to another state and the wards retained no property in this state requiring the care and attention of the guardian, such facts might, and perhaps would, be cause for settlement of the account of the guardian in this state and his discharge. But that question does not arise in this case. It is argued, however, that the general guardian appointed by the probate court of this state, who was also named as testamentary guardian in the purported will, was without authority to conduct the litigation over the probate of the will and to incur expenses in connection therewith. We are not in accord with this view of the case. It would seem to us that where the will appeared to be legal and fair upon its face, as it did in this case, and by the terms of such will the testator had named a guardian for his minor children, it was within the scope of the guardian’s power and authority to pursue reasonable methods for the proof and probate of that instrument. Sections 5669 and 5673 indicate a legislative intent to cover such cases as this. He was recognized and treated as general guardian by all the courts of this state throughout the entire litigation over the probate of the will. (See Pine v. Callahan, 8 Idaho, 684, 71 Pac. 473.)
The second point argued by respondent is that the petition does not allege that notice was given of the application for ap
The items for which appellant claimed allowance in the probate court and the amounts thereof are as follows:
“To A. C. Libby, court stenographer, for transcript... .$154 35
Printing transcript for supreme court. 236 75
Printing brief of appellants for supreme court. 117 30
Filing transcripts in supreme court. 15 00
Cost transcript from probate court. 17 00
Judgment for costs recovered by respondents in supreme court against appellants. 45 00
Judgment recovered against appellants by respondents in district court. 171 50
Witness fees and mileage for the following witnesses attending the probate court and district court trials: Dr. J. C. Cunningham, Dr. C. W. Roberts, Miss Anne Deems, and Miss Emma N. Orndorf. 64 25
Copy of opinion of supreme court of Idaho. 5 00
Attorneys’ fee to Happy & Hindman, attorneys for guardian. 600 00<
Guardian’s compensation.
Total.$ ”
Sections 5669, 5671 and 5796 provide for the payment of the reasonable expenses incurred by a guardian in the discharge of
The judgment of the district court will be reversed and the cause remanded, with direction to the district court to overrule the demurrer and remand the cause to the probate court for a hearing upon the merits in conformity with the views herein expressed.
Costs of this appeal awarded to appellant.