Appanoose County v. Carson

229 N.W. 152, 210 Iowa 801
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 11, 1930
DocketNo. 40114.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 229 N.W. 152 (Appanoose County v. Carson) 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
Appanoose County v. Carson, 229 N.W. 152, 210 Iowa 801 (iowa 1930).

Opinion

Faville, J.

It is conceded that appellant has a judgment against the decedent, and that the claim founded upon said judgment was duly filed in the estate. It is also conceded that appellee is administrator of the estate of said decedent, and that he has certain funds in his hands which were turned over to him by the guardian of said decedent, all of which are originally pension funds, and that whatever amount had accumulated thereon in excess of the original pension has been paid out by him. The appellee, who is now administrator of the estate of the decedent, was formerly guardian of said decedent. In a former action, appellant herein sought to establish its claim against certain of the funds which were in the hands of the guardian. On appeal, we held that the original pension fund in the hands of said guardian was exempt, but that the accumulations thereon were not exempt. Appanoose County v. Henke, 207 Iowa 835. The instant case involves solely the original pension funds, without accumulations, and said funds are now in the hands of the administrator of the estate of said decedent. The question is whether or not said funds are exempt, under either state or Federal statutes.

I. Section 11761, Code, 1927, is as follows:

"All money received by any person, a resident of the state, as a pension from the United States government, whether the same shall be in the actual possession of such pensioner, or de *803 posited, loaned, or invested by him, shall be exempt from execution, whether such pensioner shall be the head of a family or not.”

Under this section of the statute, pension money received by any person who is a resident of the state shall be exempt from execution against said pensioner. The statute, however, makes no provision that pension money in the hands of the. pensioner at the time of the latter’s death is exempt, in the hands of the administrator of his estate. The rule of homestead exemption, under Code Section 10153, has no application.

In the case of Baugh v. Barrett, 69 Iowa 495, we said, by way of dictum, that the statute which had been passed as Chapter 23 of the Acts of the Twentieth General Assembly was not applicable to the facts in said cause, and, regarding it, we said:

“It is apparent, however,, that the act was intended solely for the advantage of the pensioner. It exempts the money or property from seizure for the satisfaction of his debts, and he. is the person intended to be benefited by it.”

In Perkins v. Hinckley, 71 Iowa 499, we considered a case where the widow of a pensioner sought recovery of pension money in the hands of the administrator of her husband’s estate. We held that the pension money was exempt to the pensioner under such statute, and not under the statute providing for exemption to the head of a family, and that, therefore, it was not personal property exempt to the widow of the pensioner, but passed to the administrator.

We find nothing in our statutes, nor in any of our previous decisions, to the effect that, under circumstances such as are disclosed in this ease, pension funds in the hands of the administrator of the estate of a deceased pensioner who is not the head of a family are exempt to the heirs of said decedent. It therefore follows that, under the state statute, said funds in the hands of the administrator would be subject to the claims of creditors of the decedent.

II. The question then remains as to whether or not, under Federal statutes, the funds now in the hands of the administrator are exempt from the claims of the creditors of the decedent. Section 4747, Revised Statutes of the United States,is as follows:

*804 “No sum of money due, or to become due, to any pensioner, shall be liable to attachment, levy, or seizure by or under any legal or equitable process whatever, whether the same remains with the pension office, or any officer or agent thereof, or is in course of transmission to the pensioner entitled thereto, but shall inure wholly to the benefit of such pensioner. ’ ’

The Supreme Court of the United States has construed this statute in McIntosh v. Aubrey, 185 U. S. 122 (46 L. Ed. 834), decided in 1902. The court said:

“The language of the section of itself seems to present no difficulty, and if doubt arises at all, it is only on account of the decisions of courts, whose opinions are always entitled to respect. Crow v. Brown, 81 Iowa 344; Yates Co. National Bank v. Carpenter, 119 N. Y. 550. But notwithstanding, we think the purpose of Congress is clearly expressed. It is not that pension money shall be exempt from attachment in all of its situations and transmutations. It is only to be exempt in one situation, to wit, when 'due or to become due.’ From that situation the pension money of plaintiff in error had departed. The simplicity and directness of the statute are impaired by attempts to explain it by the use of other terms than its own. That money received is not money due, and that real estate is not money at all, would seem, if real distinctions be regarded, as obvious enough, without explanation. Nor are legal fictions applicable. Undoubtedly the law often regards money as land, and land as money, and, through all the forms in which property may be put,_ will, if possible, trace and establish the original ownership ; but these are special instances, depending on special principles, and cannot be made a test of the purpose of Congress in enacting Section 4747.”

The only question at this point is whether or not this statute is applicable under the facts of this case. Are the pension funds in the hands of the administrator of the estate of the pensioner within the terms of this statute? They were funds that had all “become due,” and had in fact been paid by the government, and did not remain with the pension office. They were not with any officer or agent of the pension office. Even if, for some purposes, a guardian of a pensioner may be deemed an agent of the government (a question which we shall discuss later), it *805 does not follow that an administrator of a deceased pensioner is such officer or agent of the government. He takes the funds as the representative of the decedent, for the purpose of administering the estate, not as a guardian takes the funds, for the benefit of the pensioner personally. Nor do we think the fund can be said to be "in the course of transmission to the pensioner entitled thereto.” Under the facts of the instant case, the funds were not in the course of transmission to the pensioner. They had already been transmitted to the guardian of the pensioner during the lifetime of the pensioner. It would be doing violence to the obvious language and plain meaning of the statute to hold that, after the decease of the pensioner, and .after the funds had been delivered to the administrator, they were then being held by the administrator "in the course of transmission to the pensioner.”

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229 N.W. 152, 210 Iowa 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appanoose-county-v-carson-iowa-1930.