181 Iowa 134 | Iowa | 1917
“Q. I ask you if you can state from your examination of the records that no bond or oath or qualification has ever been filed by J. E. Himmel as such guardian. A. No, sir.”
The witness adds that no letters of guardianship were ever issued to Himmel. The administrator of Iverson turned the note and mortgage over to Himmel, and Himmel,
Defendant asked plaintiff, about three weeks before she became of age, and, therefore, about two weeks before he made payment to Himmel, whether she wanted that money when she became of age, and she said, “Yes.” The note was not due until April, 1915, but he raised some grain and paid the note to Himmel before it was due, some six days before plaintiff became of age, and understood at that time that he was plaintiff’s guardian. As will appear, Himmel paid plaintiff part of what was paid him on the note. She never told defendant of the payment Hinunel had made to her; never asked defendant about the money after he paid it to Himmel, and said nothing about her note or any money until Himmel went into bankruptcy, more than a year after defendant made payment. There appears this in the testimony :
“Q. Well, what did you think Himmel would pay you $300 for, if he hadn’t collected anything of your step*137 father? A. Well, the agreement was made when he was appointed guardian that Mr. Anfenson was to pay it, and I supposed he had, and not asking him, I didn’t know.”
II. Though Himmel did not qualify, yet it was plaintiff whom the statute authorized to take and Avho took the step without which Himmel could not be her guardian, and in the absence of which he would not have acted as her' guardian. She alone had power to select him. She had power to deal with any situation created by and to obviate results that might flow from his failure to take steps to qualify him; because, if he did not qualify, there was no guardian chosen, and she could choose another. Defendant had no such power. When she held Himmel out to be her guardian, she did not know he had not qualified. But neither did. defendant know of the failure to qualify, when he paid Himmel. She did what defendant did not do. She held Himmel out to be her guardian; she permitted her note and mortgage to remain with him. Thus she laid the foundation upon which Himmel could work a fraud upon anyone' who in good faith believed that Himmel was authorized to act as guardian and to take payment upon the note and mortgage which he had in his possession. More, the record fairly shows that, shortly before her minority ended, plaintiff had reason to believe that defendant would pay this note to Himmel, and made no objection. The position of plaintiff is that, though more than 14 years old, she was still a minor in such sense that no act or omission on her part could estop her to deny that Himmel washer guardian, and that here is a naked case of payment made to one who had no authority to receive it. This position is sound if she had been less than 14 years old. The question is whether Section 3195, Code, 1897, worked a limited manumission which subjects her to being estopped to deny that a guardian chosen by her is not legally her guardian.
What has the legislature done? Section 3195 of the Code of 1897 is:
“A minor over fourteen years of age, of sound mind, may select the guardian, subject to approval by the district court, or a judge thereof, of the county in which his parents reside, if living with them, if not, of the county of his residence.”
It is suggested that this but recognizes that one over 14 is old enough to make it important that there shall be no friction because a personal guardian is not pleasing to the ward. But that could not have been the object of the statute. It deals wholly with a guardian over property. Section 3194, Code, 1897, which deals with guardianship of property, is its antecedent. The parents are the guardians of the person, and no other is to be appointed as long as there are parents. Yet Section 3195 permits the choosing of a guardian while the parents are living. All of which emphasizes that the selection which it authorizes is of a guardian to manage property.
Why is it not plainly the purpose of the statute to recognize that, when 14 is reached, youth no longer negatives intelligence to choose a proper guardian of property, — to declare that, when and after that age is attained, there exists
It may be said that it is unreasonable and arbitrary to authorize one at 14 years of age to select a guardian to
These and other statutes on the same subject can be said to be unreasonable only if it be against'reason to couple a grant of power or removal of a disability with corresponding duty, obligation and responsibility. On that reasoning, the minor who is authorized to maintain an action for nuisance, waste and trespass is not bound to pay the costs of suit, if the one he institutes be defeated. Before he is 14, no valid service of notice can be had upon him. He may be effectively served after he has reached that age. Is he as little bound by the notice which may, as by the one that might not, be served upon him? After he is 14, substituted service may be had upon him, binding others. On what theory? Manifestly, by entertaining the conclusive presumption'that he has intelligence enough to apprehend the effect of the service, and that he will advise the member of the family impleaded of having been served. In this illustrated case, there is more than a recognition of ability to act for himself. He is made the agent of another, and that other is bound and may suffer,
If we are to go into the question of reasonableness, the legislature had to fix an arbitrary time, and must be credited with having had all the possibilities in view when it made this time limit. If it can be said that it seems unreasonable to give a 14-year old girl powers which would make her responsible if her negligence in either selecting or having qualified a guardian injured another, it must also be said that, without this statute, a girl just one day short of being 18, or a boy just one day short of being 21, could deliberately defraud another by. a pretense that one receiving payment was a duly qualified guardian, and yet escape all liability. And truly illuminative is the provision of Section 3190, Code, 1897, that a minor may not disaffirm his contracts where, on account of his having engaged in business as an adult, the other party had good reason to believe him capable of contracting. The legislature, being-obliged to fix an arbitrary time, must have had all the periods and possibilities we have spoken of in view. In view of all this, it is not unreasonable to provide that minority was removed after a person of sound mind attained the age of 14-, to the extent of making such person responsible if something done or not done by him in the selecting of a guardian subjected another not in fault to an injury. And it should be borne in mind that, if this statute does not create a limited manumission, it is because we must hold that the statute had no purpose. Without it, this plaintiff could not be estopped or have any responsibility concerning the appointment of a guardian until she became 18 or married. If that is still so, notwithstanding the enactment of this statute, then there was no occasion for the enactment.
We think the plea of minority does not avail to pre
She deferred all activities towards collection until collection had become hopeless. It was only after Himmel went into bankruptcy that she took steps to ascertain whether he had a bond, and consulted lawyers to that end. It was then that she first proposed to collect the balance of
One theory advanced by appellee is that defendant has suffered no prejudice, and therefore no estoppel arises. It is not at all clear that prejudice is lacking. If more pressure had been brought to bear by her, Himmel might have paid all, rather than part. Had she, as soon as she could after becoming of age, advised defendant of the situation, he might have forced, or attempted to force, Himmel to pay over the balance. She preferred to make Himmel her debtor. But, in a sense, the presence of prejudice is quite beside the question, which is, how plaintiff may deny that Himmel was her agent to receive full payment on the note; how she can avoid the agency by ratifying only so much of what her agent did as.is to her profit.
In this suit, she concedes that the part that Himmel paid over to her is a credit to defendant, and he was given such credit. Assume that she never gave Himmel original authority to collect this note, yet ratification is equal to original authority. We see no escape from holding that there was an agency by ratification. If defendant is noAv entitled to a credit for part of what Himmel received, it must be because Himmel was empowered to receive all. Where one receives $600 for another, and that other is advised of the fact, he may not take $300 of the sum paid in, agree to defer payment of the balance, treat the $30.0 paid over as received upon authority, and deny that there was authority to receive all because part was not paid over. We cannot escape it will not avail to say that an agent who was authorized to receive $600 paid her but half of that sum. In essence, the trial court permitted a ratification which adopted only so much as was beneficial to plaintiff. We are of opinion that Himmel was the agent of this plaintiff and never the agent of the defendant, and that any loss suffered because the agent was guilty of a breach
3-a.
It is urged that, though Himmel had the note in his possession, defendant cannot be said to have paid the note to one apparently the rightful holder or owner thereof. The argument is that this result's from the fact that the note bore no endorsement of payment other than interest, and that the mortgage was never formally released. We do not agree to such deduction from these premises.
It follows that the decree of the district court must be • — Reversed.