17 S.D. 1 | S.D. | 1903
This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court within and for Union county, reversing an order or decree of the county court which purported to vacate certain previous orders of that court adjudging Thomas Olson to be incompetent, and appointing guardians of his person and estate. Olson is the appellant in this court.
In March, 1891, the judge of the county court of Union county signed an order purporting to appoint A. O. Ringsrud guardian of the person and estate of Thomas Olson, on the ground that Olson was inpompetent, by reason of old age and physical infirmities, to manage his own affairs.- On May 28, 1892, Ringsrud delivered a letter of resignation to the county judge, but it was neither filed nor accepted until August 13,
The court below, having stated that it would make an order consolidating the two cases, to which counsel for Olson objected, subsequently filed a formal order purporting to consolidate the two appeals. It is manifest from a mere inspection of the record before us that the court and Olson’s counsel were laboring under the erroneous impression that both appeals were from the order made by the county court on August 16th, whereas in fact but one appeal had been taken from that order. Hence nothing, in effect, was consolidated with case No. 2, and it is clearly disclosed by the record that the issues in that case were alone considered by the court in rendering the judgment from which the present appeal was taken. We
It is contended that the circuit court erred in excluding certain evidence offered for the purpose of showing that the orders and decrees of the county court adjudging Olson to be incompetent, and purporting to appoint guardians of his person and estate, were invalid, because the records of that court had not been signed by the county judges who made such orders and decrees. Without considering whether such orders and decrees wTere invalid for the reason assigned, we think the evidence was properly excluded because the petition acted upon by the county court contained no suggestion that the orders and decrees of that court should be vacated because they had not been properly entered on its records. _ That issue was not presented by the petition, and only such issues as were presented by the petition could be tried by the circuit court in the absence of an amendment, which was not requested.
• It was not error to exclude the order of the county court from which the appeal was taken, when offered in evidence by Olson’s attorneys. The trial in the circuit court was on questions of both law and fact. It involved a trial of tbe issues presented by Olson’s petition de novo, and such trial should have been, as it was, conducted in the same manner as if the proceedings had been originally commenced in the circuit court. Oomp. Laws 1887, § 5976. It is impossible to imagine how the contents of the county court’s order could have affected the determination of the issues presented to the circuit court, Again, the order itself was on file in the circuit court,
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.