Andrews v. Armagast

184 Iowa 698
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 25, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 Iowa 698 (Andrews v. Armagast) 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
Andrews v. Armagast, 184 Iowa 698 (iowa 1918).

Opinions

Evans, J.

1. Deeds: ratification of voidable deed. I. This case is closely related to the case of Curtis v.' Armagast, 158 Iowa 507. The plaintiff’s attack is upon the same conveyance as was successfully attacked in the Curtis case. The record involves the same family history. The conveyance under attack was made by Margaret Andrews to her son, James D. Andrews, the brother of the plaintiff and the father of the defendant. The evidence in the Curtis case was put in evidence in the present case. The facts in the Curtis case, including the history of the family, were gone into quite [701]*701fully in the majority and dissenting opinions filed therein, on appeal to this court. The conflicting opinions presented no material difference as to the detailed facts. We are disposed, therefore, to curtail somewhat the fact recitals herein, and to adopt by this reference the detailed recitals made in both the majority- and dissenting opinions. The conveyance in question was made in 1896. It included all the land owned' by the grantor, comprising about 1,000 acres, in Mills County, Iowa. The grantor, Margaret Andrews, was, at that time, 88 years of age. Her children and only heirs at law were the son James, and two daughters, Jessie Andrews and Margaret Gray. This conveyance was made in the state of New York, of which all the parties were residents. This conveyance by the mother was made with the full knowledge of the plaintiff, and with her apparent acquiescence. In the year 1900, James died. Shortly before his death, he conveyed the land to his daughter, Mary Armagast, the defendant herein. This conveyance also was made with the full knowledge of the mother, Margaret, and of the plaintiff, and with the apparent acquiescence of each. The mother, Margaret, died in 1903, without ever having repudiated the conveyance. The daughter Margaret Gray died in 1906, leaving surviving her her daughter, Belle Curtis,, as her only heir. The conveyance in question was first challenged by Curtis by the bringing of her suit in attack thereon, in 1909. She obtained a decree in such suit, whereby her title to one third of the land was established, and such decree was affirmed here on appeal. Thereafter, and in the year 1913, the plaintiff instituted the present suit, whereby she seeks to establish her title also to one third of the land conveyed. Her petition rests upon the same allegations as did the petition of Curtis. The same defenses as were interposed in the Gurtis case are interposed, also, herein, with a fur-' ther defense that the plaintiff herself had ratified the con[702]*702veyance in question and acquiesced therein, both at the time thereof and again after the death of her mother.

The general ground of attack upon the conveyance is that the grantee, James, sustained a fiduciary relation to his mother, and that he obtained the conveyance in question by virtue thereof, and without the free consent of the grantor; and that the same was, therefore, obtained by actual or constructive fraud. The > answer set forth the following defenses: (1) A general denial; (2) the statute of limitations; (3) ratification and acquiescence on the part of Margaret Andrews; (4) ratification and acquiescence on the part of plaintiff; (5) laches.

Upon trial had, decree was entered for the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.

2. Judgment: new issues preventing plea of adjudication. It is urged by appellee that the decree in the Curtis case is an adjudication of every question involved herein, and that the same is available to the plaintiff; and such decree has been accordingly pleaded as an adjudication. Appellee cites no authority in support of her contention at this point. We think the contention is not sound in principle. Jessie was not a party to the Curtis case. She would not have been bound by an adverse result. If she had been a party, it would have been legally and consistently possible to award recovery to Curtis and to deny it to Jessie, or vice. versa. Evidence introduced might be competent as to one of the parties and incompetent as to the other. The defense of the statute of limitations might be sustained as to the one and denied as to the other. Likewise, the plea of ratification and acquiescence. The question thus presented by the appellee is very fully considered in Allred v. Smith, 135 N. C. 443 (65 L. R. A. 924). The conclusions there announced are adverse to the appellee’s contention. A like conclusion was reached [703]*703by this court, and announced briefly, without argument, in Sawyer v. Kelly, 148 Iowa 644.

II. It is further urged, however, that, even though the decree in the Curtis case be not an adjudication in a conclusive sense, it is, at least, a controlling precedent. The premise upon which this contention is based is that both cases rest upon the same propositions of law, and upon the same facts. If this premise be conceded, the conclusion would naturally follow. Though the two cases do rest largely upon the same legal propositions, this is not wholly true. It will be seen, also, in the further discussion, that the cases do not rest upon the same facts, even though they do rest largely upon the same evidence. This distinction arises, in part, from the fact that there is much evidence in the record which is competent as to one plaintiff and incompetent as to the other. Though this court was divided in opinion in the Curtis case, that difference will be deemed closed by the majority opinion therein, and will not be reopened now. Upon this record, the majority of the court reaches a conclusion adverse to the appellee, and such conclusion is' based upon the differentiation found between the two cases. The general nature of such differentiation may be here indicated, in advance of the fuller discussion. In the Curtis case, Jessie Andrews was the principal witness, and was the only witness to the most important facts. The alleged dominance of the son James over the mother, and the fiduciary relation, were proved by her testimony alone. This consisted largely of personal transactions and communications between her and each of the deceased parties to the conveyance in question. Inasmuch as Jessie was not a party to that suit, or legally interested in the event thereof, this evidence was deemed admissible in the Curtis case. Under the inhibition of Section 4604 of the Code, such evidence is not admissible in this case, the witness being herself the plaintiff.

[704]*704Furthermore, there appeal’s in. this record evidence of admissions made by this plaintiff, both by statement, by writing, and by conduct, tending to establish two fact propositions: (1) That, after the death of the son, James, the mother, Margaret, had ratified and acquiesced in the deed in question; (2) that the plaintiff herself, both before and after the death of her mother, had ratified and acquiesced in the same. This latter fact proposition was not in issue in the Curtis case. Though many, of the admissions were contained in the record in the Curtis case, as a part of the cross-examination of this plaintiff as a witness therein, they were not available to the defense as substantive evidence; whereas, they are available as such in this case. These admissions are admissible against the plaintiff, not only in proof of ratification and acquiescence, but in proof, also, that the conveyance itself was, in fact, a fair and just transaction.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Graham v. Williams
293 N.W. 562 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 Iowa 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-armagast-iowa-1918.