In the Matter of the Guardianship of G.M., G.M., ward/appellant. ( 2015 )


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  •                       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 14-1433
    Filed July 22, 2015
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    GUARDIANSHIP OF G.M.,
    G.M., Ward/Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Appanoose County, Annette J.
    Scieszinski, Judge.
    A ward with intellectual disabilities appeals a district court’s denial of his
    motion to modify his residence. AFFIRMED.
    Julie R. De Vries of De Vries Law Office, Centerville, for appellant.
    Jonathan Willier, Centerville, guardian ad litem for ward.
    Bradley M. Grothe of Craver & Grothe, L.L.P., Centerville, for guardian
    and conservator.
    Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Doyle, JJ.
    2
    VAITHESWARAN, J.
    G.M., diagnosed with mental retardation and developmental disability, was
    appointed a guardian and conservator.       The guardian placed him in a home
    under the auspices of a nonprofit organization charged with caring for mentally
    challenged and chronically mentally ill individuals. The “Home and Community
    Based Services program” furnished twenty-four hour care.
    G.M. applied to change his living arrangement to an independent
    apartment with hourly services.     Following trial, the district court denied the
    application. G.M. appealed.
    G.M. contends the district court (1) should have allowed him to live in a
    less restrictive environment; (2) failed to consider alternative third-party
    assistance; and (3) erred in admitting hearsay evidence. Our review is de novo.
    
    Iowa Code § 633.33
     (2013), Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. Under this standard,
    evidence, which under the ordinary rules of evidence applicable to
    a civil trial would be excluded as hearsay, lacking a proper
    foundation, improper opinion evidence, or not the best evidence, is
    admissible in such proceedings and the nature of the evidence is to
    be considered as it affects its probative value rather than its
    admissibility.
    Harter v. State, 
    149 N.W.2d 827
    , 829 (Iowa 1967).            “[O]bjections will be
    considered in relation to the weight to be given the evidence rather than its
    admissibility.” 
    Id.
    I.      Less-Restrictive Residence
    As a preliminary matter, we must decide what standards govern G.M.’s
    application. The district court provided invaluable assistance by seeking and
    obtaining clarification of the disparate statutory standards governing guardianship
    3
    proceedings. See 
    Iowa Code §§ 633.635
    (5) (authorizing a court to modify the
    respective responsibilities of the guardian and ward “upon a proper showing” and
    incorporating the standards of section 633.551 “to the modification proceedings”),
    633.551(3) (stating    “In     a   proceeding to   terminate   a   guardianship   or
    conservatorship, if the ward is the petitioner, the ward shall make a prima facie
    showing of some decision-making capacity.          Once a prima facie showing is
    made, the burden of persuasion is on the guardian or conservator to show by
    clear and convincing evidence that the ward is incompetent” but saying nothing
    about proceedings to modify guardianships if the ward is the petitioner (emphasis
    added)), 633.675 (referenced by section 633.635(5) as applicable to modification
    proceedings but again referring to burden in proceedings to terminate
    guardianships). G.M. and the guardian agreed G.M.’s application for a change of
    residence was essentially a request to modify the unlimited guardianship created
    earlier. They further agreed G.M. would have to make a prima facie showing of
    some decision-making capacity and, if this showing was made, the guardian
    would have the burden of persuading the court “that the full guardianship should
    proceed without limitation.”
    On appeal, G.M.’s guardian ad litem “concedes that at trial [G.M.] met his
    initial burden and made a prima facie showing that he has some decision-making
    capacity.” Accordingly, the only issue before us is whether the guardian carried
    his burden of persuading the district court that the guardianship should remain
    unlimited, leaving the decision of the ward’s residence with the guardian.
    At trial, the guardian asserted he would have to prove the statutory
    requirements of section 633.552(a). This provision addresses the appointment of
    4
    guardians but is referred to in section 633.675(1)(c), a provision governing
    termination of guardianships.   Section 633.675(1)(c) requires the guardian to
    allege the ward “[i]s a person whose decision-making capacity is so impaired that
    the person is unable to care for the person’s personal safety or to attend to or
    provide for necessities for the person such as food, shelter, clothing, or medical
    care, without which physical injury or illness might occur.”    The district court
    concluded the guardian satisfied his burden. On our de novo review, we agree.
    G.M. testified he was sixty-six years old.        He had been under a
    guardianship since he was fifty-nine. At the time of the appointment, he was
    malnourished, living in unhygienic conditions, and unable to manage his
    finances.
    A physician assistant who treated and befriended G.M. in 2005 and 2006
    testified G.M. recognized his inability to manage many aspects of daily living and
    asked her to assist in obtaining services and the appointment of a guardian.
    She opined G.M. needed twenty-four hour monitoring “[b]ecause of his current
    physical and his mental disabilities.” She further opined hourly services would
    not be adequate to ensure his safety.
    G.M.’s guardian seconded this opinion. He testified to “several episodes
    when [G.M.] has fallen or been disoriented when if somebody hadn’t been there,
    who knows what could have happened.” He also agreed with the physician’s
    assistant that G.M. had “a real problem with [] making executive decisions,”
    which would “continue to be a problem.” He described G.M. as “pleasant” and
    able to “interact[] well with people” but possessed of “a tendency to think he is
    more capable than he is.”
    5
    A supervisor at an organization providing services to G.M. catalogued the
    risks of living independently, including G.M.’s inability to follow-up with medical
    needs, malnutrition, poor hygiene, and exploitation by others. Hourly services, in
    her view, would not alleviate the risks, particularly those associated with his
    medical conditions. She opined the progress he made was “due to the staff . . .
    available to him” and G.M. was “in the most appropriate setting at this time.”
    We recognize G.M. was the most self-sufficient of the three residents in
    the home. He traveled alone to and from his place of employment, attended a
    medical visit on his own, and cooked and cleaned without assistance.
    Understandably, then, he chaffed at the restrictions placed upon him. But the
    restrictions were minimal under the circumstances and addressed issues relating
    to his health and safety. On our de novo review, we conclude the district court
    appropriately concluded the guardian met his burden, and properly declined to
    modify the guardianship to allow G.M.’s placement in an independent living
    environment.
    II.      Alternative Third-Party Assistance
    Iowa Code section 633.551(4) states,
    In proceedings to establish, modify, or terminate a guardianship or
    conservatorship, in determining if the proposed ward or ward is
    incompetent as defined in section 633.3, the court shall consider
    credible evidence from any source to the effect of third-party
    assistance in meeting the needs of the proposed ward or ward.
    However, neither party to the action shall have the burden to
    produce such evidence relating to third-party assistance.
    See also 
    Iowa Code § 633.635
    (4) (authorizing court to consider “the availability
    of third-party assistance to meet the needs of the ward or proposed ward”). G.M.
    contends the district court failed to consider alternative service providers. To the
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    contrary, the record is replete with evidence concerning the efficacy of existing
    services and the availability of alternative services.
    The district specifically addressed G.M.’s dissatisfaction with the current
    living arrangement and his proposal for hourly services with another provider.
    While the court questioned the credibility of certain witnesses who testified on
    behalf of the existing service provider, the court nonetheless found G.M. in need
    of the twenty-four hour services he was currently receiving. We concur in the
    court’s findings, particularly where the alternate, “more objective” provider G.M.
    solicited found his existing services appropriate. We conclude the district court
    considered third-party assistance in meeting the needs of the proposed ward.
    III.      Hearsay Evidence
    G.M. asserts the district court erred in admitting a psychological report.
    He challenges the foundation for the document and contends the document
    contains hearsay. The report, prepared by a psychologist who did not appear at
    trial, was admitted through the executive director of the organization providing
    G.M.’s existing services. She testified the organization was required by law to
    maintain records showing eligibility of the clients for the services and the
    eligibility document in this case was the psychological evaluation. The district
    court admitted the document subject to the objection.
    We assume without deciding the guardian laid a proper foundation for the
    document and the document was admissible under the business-records
    exception to the hearsay rule. See State v. Musser, 
    721 N.W.2d 734
    , 750-52
    (Iowa 2006); Iowa R. Evid. 5.803(6). On our de novo review, we conclude the
    7
    guardian satisfied his burden of persuasion in support of an unlimited
    guardianship without reliance on the challenged document.
    We affirm the district court’s denial of G.M’s application for modification of
    the guardianship.
    AFFIRMED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-1433

Filed Date: 7/22/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/22/2015