132 Iowa 493 | Iowa | 1906
If the allegations of the defendants in their answer are true, and their truth is admitted by the demurrer, then the court should have made some provision for the custody of the wards, at least temporarily, by the defendants, and shall not have ordered their immediate surrender into the custody of plaintiff; and the finding of facts by the court in such an inquiry as was suggested by the allegations of defendants’ answer would have been sustained by this court on appeal if reasonably supported by the evidence. But it seems to us that a more satisfactory solution of the question which the parties sought to present to the trial court would have been reached by a proceeding for the removal of the plaintiff as guardian, and the substitution of some other person; and we think also that the pleadings would have justified the trial court in granting such relief, had the evidence been found on a hearing to be such as to make it proper. The defendants specifically asked that plaintiff be removed, and her letters of guardianship revoked, and that J. E. Donahue, an uncle of the wards, and the defendant Catherine Haas, their aunt, be appointed such guardians. It was further alleged that
If, as above indicated, this is in effect a proceeding in the probate conrt for the purpose of carrying out the appointment of plaintiff as guardian and making effectual the issuance of letters of guardianship, then there is no apparent reason why the defendants in this proceeding should not ask the removal of the plaintiff as guardian and the substitution of proper persons. In any view of the casé, we think the demurrer to the defendant’s answer should not have been sustained, but that the court should have proceeded to hear the evidence, and make some determination as to the proper custody of the wards, either temporary or permanent, as the best interests of such wards should seem to require.
The order of the lower court sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s answer is therefore reversed.