Adams v. Adams

30 N.W. 795, 70 Iowa 253
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 10, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 30 N.W. 795 (Adams v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Adams, 30 N.W. 795, 70 Iowa 253 (iowa 1886).

Opinion

Reed, J.

The plaintiff and defendant are children of Ebenezer Adams, who died in January, 1884, at the age of [254]*254ninety-four years. He left surviving him the parties to this action and five other children. For the last six months of I'his life he lived with plaintiff and Mrs. Chloe Weedon, another daughter. Previous to that, for about eight years, he had lived with another daughter, Sarah Hutchison. Some years before his death he executed a will, by which he devised all the property of which he should be seized at the time of his death to plaintiff, Mrs. Weedon and Mrs. Hutch-ison, in equal shares. A short time before he died he executed to plaintiff a conveyance of the tract of land which is included in the mortgage in question, and which was all the real estate owned by him. No consideration was paid by plaintiff for this conveyance. Plaintiff did not place this deed of record until after the death of her father, and Mrs. Hutchison had no knowledge of the execution of the deed until after it was recorded. After the death of the father, plaintiff took possession of the personal property belonging to the estate, which was of the value of about $1,500. She also took possession of said will. Soon afterwards, Mrs. Hutchison began to inquire for the will, but plaintiff sought to impress her with the belief that their father had destroyed it before he died, and she sent it to defendant, who resided in the state of Illinois, and requested him to place it in the possession of a third party, to be retained until she should call for it. When Mrs. Hutchison learned of the existence of the deed from her father to plaintiff, she was greatly dissatisfied; and she made the claim that, owing to the weakness and imbecility of the father when he signed the deed, he was incapable of making a valid contract. She also threatened to institute legal proceedings for the annul-hnent of the deed, and for the recovery of the will, and the establishment of the rights conferred upon her by it. Plaintiff thereupon requested the defendant to come to Iowa, (and endeavor to effect a settlement of the matters in dispute between the parties. He accordingly visited them, and h negotiation for a settlement was entered into. Mrs. Hutch-[255]*255ison at first demanded the interest in the whole property, which she would have taken under the will if it had been admitted to probate, and the conveyance of the land had not been executed. She afterwards consented, however, that the whole property might be divided equally between plaintiff, defendant, Mrs. "Weedon and herself.

It does not clearly appear who first made the suggestion to permit the defendant to take a share of the property; but, as he claimed that his father had often told him that he intended to make some provision for him out of his estate, the suggestion probably came from him. The parties agreed upon that division of the property as a basis of settlement. It was further agreed that plaintiff should retain the land and a portion of the personal property. Certain notes belonging to the estate were turned over to Mrs. Hutchison in part payment of the amount coming to her under the settlement, and plaintiff gave her own promissory note for the difference between the amount of said notes and the value of her share, and she executed to plaintiff a release of her interest in the estate. The notes and mortgage in question were given to defendant in satisfaction of the amount which %vas coming to him under the settlement. The substance of plaintiff’s complaint is that, at the time of the transactions in question, she was in a delicate state of health, and greatly' troubled and annoyed by the complications which had arisen with reference to the estate; and that, having implicit confidence in defendant, who is a minister of the gospel, she appealed to him to advise and assist her in the emergency, and that he advised and induced her to consent to the settlement, and that he represented to her that it was necessary for her to sign the papers in question in order to effect a settlement and avoid litigation; and that, relying upon his representations, and having full confidence in him, she did sign them, without having any understanding of their effect, or of the obligations she was thereby assuming; and she [256]*256claims that they were obtained by fraud and undue influence, and that they were given without consideration.

I. It would not serve any useful purpose to set out the evidence in the case. We will content ourselves, as is our 1. mortgage: undue iuflu-dencsgnotVI" establishing, custom in cases of this class, with a statement of . . . the ultimate tacts which we think are proven. Pontiff undoubtedly had great confidence in judgment and integrity of defendant, and relied upon him to bring about a settlement betweén her and Mrs. Hutchison. He did not, however, assume to act in the matter as her agent or attorney; that is, he did not himself make the settlement with Mrs. Hutchison, but sought rather to bring the parties together, that they might themselves arrive at an understanding. While it may be that he first made the suggestion that he ought to be permitted to take a portion of the property, it is clear that he did not urge that claim upon either of the parties, and he certainly, used no persuasion to induce plaintiff to consent to it. She admits herself that she assented to it at once when the suggestion was made to her. She understood the basis of the settlement, and we are fully satisfied that, when she signed the note and mortgage, she knew the character of the instruments, and the nature of the obligations she was assuming. We are also satisfied that she executed them after full deliberation. She was exceedingly anxious that some adjust ment of the matter should be made that would prevent litiga tion. In her letter to defendant, in which she asked him to come to Iowa and endeavor to effect a settlement, she told him that she dreaded a “ lawsuit,” and, in some of her conversations with him pending the negotiation, she expressed, not only a willingness, but a desire, that he should share in the inheritance; so that she obtained by the settlement some of the principal objects she had in view when the negotiation was entered into. It is very clear, we think, that the contract cannot be avoided on the ground that it was obtained by fraud or undue influence.

[257]*257II. Is tbe contract supported by a valid consideration? It is clear that it is not supported by any pecuniary consid-¿¿deration: settlement of estate among heirs. eration moving between plaintiff and defendant. It is conceded by all of the parties that the will •' 0f Ebenezer Adams is valid, and there was no obstacle to its being admitted to probate. When probated, the whole of the estate would have vested, under its provisions, in plaintiff, Mrs. Hutchison and Mrs. Weedon Defendant, then, had no interest in the property. Nor was he asserting any. He claimed, it is true, that his father had promised to make some provision for him out of the estate; but, as he had died without altering the provisions of his will, he knew perfectly well that he had no valid claim to any portion of the property. If the question depended solely on the relations which plaintiff and defendant bore to each other and to the estate, it is very clear that there would be an entire absence of any valid consideration to support plaintiff’s promise.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.W. 795, 70 Iowa 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-adams-iowa-1886.