Bagnall v. Iowa-Des Moines National Bank & Trust Co.

29 N.W.2d 597, 238 Iowa 905, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 367
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 14, 1947
DocketNo. 47055.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 29 N.W.2d 597 (Bagnall v. Iowa-Des Moines National Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Bagnall v. Iowa-Des Moines National Bank & Trust Co., 29 N.W.2d 597, 238 Iowa 905, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 367 (iowa 1947).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

Tbe primary question for determination on this appeal is whether tbe property of tbe mentally incompetent divorced husband, in tbe possession of his guardian, which bas been acquired witb benefit payments of tbe kind noted above, is exempt, under either tbe statutes of tbe United States or the statutes of Iowa, from the enforced payment of tbe judgment of tbe plaintiff wife for alimony.

This question bas never before been presented to this court.

*907 The facts are not in dispute. Daniel L. Bagnall served in the armed forces of the United States in 1918 and 1919. The plaintiff and he were married on December 28, 1921, and they lived together as wife and husband for five or six years. He did not provide for her and because thereof they lived with her parents. He abused her by physical violence and mistreatment, by cursing and improper language, by neglect and absence, and by addiction, acquired subsequent to the marriage, to the use of intoxicating liquor and drugs. .

He was adjudged insane in 1928, and since September of that year has been continuously a patient in the Veterans’ Hospital at Knoxville, Iowa. The defendant was appointed guardian of his property by the district court of Polk County, Iowa, on June 3, 1929. Through the Veterans’ Administration there had been paid to the defendant and its predecessor guardian, to June 12, 1946, disability compensation or pension in the sum of $17,574.06, war risk insurance in the sum of $6,552.35, and adjusted service compensation or bonus in the sum of $603, or a total of $24,729.41. The only property in the hands of the guardian was acquired with these payments. At the time of the trial it had in its possession, as the property of its ward, two and one-half per cent Treasury Bonds of the United States of the par value of $2,250, carried at $2,255, due September 15, 1932, optional September 15, 1950; United States Savings Bonds, -Series D, due December 1, 1949, of' $400 maturity value, carried at $336; United States War Savings Bonds, Series G, of $16,300 par value, of various denominations, maturities, and numbers; a United States Government insurance policy for $5,000 in the name of Daniel L. Bagnall, carried at $1. These securities totaled $18,892. Each and all of them represent investments made by the guardian or its predecessor from the proceeds of disability compensation, pension money, war risk insurance, and adjusted service compensation or bonus.

On August 30, 1946, plaintiff obtained a decree of divorce from Bagnall in the district court of Lee County, Iowa. An authenticated copy of the decree was received in evidence, without objection. It appears therefrom the court found that the husband, after the marriage, had become addicted to habitual *908 drunkenness in the use of intoxicating liquors and drugs, and had been guilty of such cruel and inhuman treatment as to endanger plaintiff’s life and health; that plaintiff was forty-six years old and defendant was about fifty years of age; that plaintiff lived with her parents and had no earning capacity and no property of any kind and was entitled to permanent alimony; and that the husband was the owner of cash and securities amounting to $19,160.11. Plaintiff was granted a decree of absolute divorce and a judgment against her husband defendant in the sum of $9,580 as permanent alimony.

On November 1, 1946, plaintiff filed the application herein, alleging in substance the facts above set out, praying for a hearing, and an order requiring the defendant to pay plaintiff out of its said guardianship funds the sum of $9,577.50, with interest.

On November 9, 1946, defendant filed resistance to the application, alleging the army service of its ward, his honorable discharge, his disability in the service, his mental ineompetency and guardianship, and the award to him of disability compensation or pension and monthly payments of war risk insurance as provided in the World War Veterans ’ Relief, Title 38 U. S. C., chapter 10, section 421 et seq. The resistance admitted the government payments as alleged in the application, and cash or property in which the payments had been invested of the value of $19,160.11, as shown by its last report of June 12, 1946; it alleged that all nonexempt funds, and earnings on exempt funds as invested, had been disbursed by the guardian by order of court, and that all the funds and property now in the hands of the "guardian were exempt with respect to the judgment for alimony, by reason of section 454a, 38 U. S. C., chapter 10, which applies to the disability compensation or pension and to the war risk insurance payments, and by reason of section 618, 38 U. S. C., chapter 11, which applies to adjusted service compensation or bonus, and by reason of section 627.8, Code of Iowa, 1946, which exempts pension money from execution, and section 511.37, Code of Iowa, 1946, which exempts a benefit or indemnity paid under an accident, health, or disability policy to the assured.

*909 For reply to the resistance plaintiff admitted all allegations therein set forth above but denied the exemption of the property as against the judgment for alimony.

In its judgment .of December 12, j.946, denying the application, the court held:

“Without setting forth the.exemption statutes cited in [the] guardian’s resistance, it is manifest that, construing the Federal and State statutes together, pension money, in the form of money or investments, is exempt from execution in Iowa. There can be no doubt that under the applicable Federal statutes, the'moneys paid to the veteran are exempt. Under the Federal statute and the constructions of our Supreme Court, a guardian while holding the funds of an incompetent veteran is nothing more than an agent for the Government and such funds have therefore not reached the hands of the veteran. In addition to the interpretation of the Federal statute by our State court, the pension fund is exempt by virtue of the State statute, which provides: [quoting section 627.8, Code, 1946], The pension money received by the veteran or his guardian, whether ‘deposited, loaned or invested by him,’ is exempt from execution. The application to subject the funds and property in the hands of the guardian to applicant’s judgment is an aid to and amounts to an execution and is contrary to the exemption statute.”

Omitting preliminary matters, the above-noted quotation is the judgment in full.. Plaintiff’s motion to set aside the judgment and for new trial, based upon various grounds alleging error in holding the property to be exempt, was denied.

Plaintiff assigns four errors upon which she relies for reversal : 1. Error in holding the investments exempt under federal statutes. 2. Error in bolding the guardian-was an agent of the Federal Government and that the guardianship funds are exempt because they have not reached the hands of the veteran. 3. Error in holding the investments exempt under the. Iowa statutes. 4. Error in holding that investments derived from pension funds can under no circumstances be subject to execution in Iowa.

No question is presented in reference to the validity or the invalidity of the decree of divorce or the judgment for alimony.

*910

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W.2d 597, 238 Iowa 905, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bagnall-v-iowa-des-moines-national-bank-trust-co-iowa-1947.