Baker v. Fowler

247 N.W. 676, 215 Iowa 1157
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 4, 1933
DocketNo. 41678.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 676 (Baker v. Fowler) 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
Baker v. Fowler, 247 N.W. 676, 215 Iowa 1157 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Albert, J.

— The plaintiff was born on the 12th day of March, 1897, and is the daughter of Hannah and Lev Parrott; the latter being deceased at the time of the bringing of this action. Plaintiff alleges that shortly after her birth, A. B. Burwell and Fannie Bur-well, now deceased, called at the home of her father and mother and orally requested her father and mother to permit them to name said child, this plaintiff; that if Lev and Hannah Parrott would permit the said Burwells to name said child and in part to bear the name of the said Mrs. Burwell, the said Burwells would, at the death of the survivor, give to said child, this plaintiff, their home, of whatsoever the same might consist or whatsoever they might own and occupy at that time as a reward for such naming of said child. This request was complied with and the Burwells were permitted to name such child, and the Burwells acquiesced therein and gave to said child, this plaintiff, the name of Luella Parrott, and she has ever since borne said name.

The plaintiff was married to Alfred Baker on November 17, 1915, and is now the wife of the said Alfred. Asa Burwell predeceased Fannie, and Fannie died seized of lots 1, 2, and 3 of subdivision of lot 1, block 10, in the town of Exira. Said real estate had been used and owned by said A. B. and Fannie L. Bur-well as a home for twenty years and more. Oscar Fowler was appointed executor of the estate of Fannie L. Burwell and has neglected and refused to carry out the terms of said oral agreement, although the plaintiff has in all respects complied with the same.

On the trial of the case, plaintiff rested almost entirely on the testimony of Hannah Parrott, her mother. The district court held that the showing was sufficient to entitle plaintiff to recover and entered decree accordingly.

Three principal contentions are made by the appellant as follows: (1) That Hannah Parrott was an incompetent witness under section 11257, Code 1931, and without her testimony plaintiff had *1159 no case; (2) that the court had no right to enter a money judgment; and (3) that in an action for specific performance the quantum of proof offered was not sufficient to warrant the court ■in entering a decree in favor of the plaintiff.

We think this case is ruled hy the determination of the question referred to last, contention 3 made by the appellant.

Passing for the moment the question of the competency of Hannah Parrott to testify in the case, and assuming, without deciding, that she was a competent witness, we turn to the law governing actions of this kind. The plaintiff is asking a specific performance of this alleged oral contract and she has the burden of proving the same by clear, sátisfactory, and convincing evidence. Lockie v. Baker, 206 Iowa 21, 218 N. W. 483.

Since the lips of the party against whose estate the contract is sought to be enforced are closed by death, the testimony of the witness Hannah Parrott deserves the court’s most careful scrutiny. We said in Garman v. Wettengel, 199 Iowa 1150, 203 N. W. 266:

“This case belongs to a class which usually challenges the scrutiny and the skepticism of the court. The evidence upon which such a case usually rests is such, in its very nature, that direct disproof is quite impossible. The defendants must rely largely upon circumstances of inconsistency and improbability. Such case imposes upon the court the special duty of receiving the direct testimony relied upon by plaintiff, subject to every fair test which tends to weaken its credibility.”

In Ross v. Ross, 148 Iowa 729, 127 N. W. 1034, 1035, this court said:

“The questions involved are almost wholly, if not entirely, questions of fact. * * As the alleged vendor is dead and cannot give his version of the matter, it is a wholesome rule of law that the testimony to sustain such a contract as is relied upon here must be clear, satisfactory, and convincing.”

Other Iowa cases holding to this rule are: Holmes v. Connable, 111 Iowa 298, 82 N. W. 780; Stennett v. Stennett, 174 Iowa 431, 156 N. W. 406; Groh v. Miller, 196 Iowa 1367, 195 N. W. 259; In re Estate of Shinn, 207 Iowa 103, 222 N. W. 569.

An application to enforce the specific performance of a contract is always addressed to the sound discretion of the chancellor, *1160 guided and governed by the general rules and principles of equity jurisprudence. In such cases, , relief is not a matter of right in either party, but is granted or withheld, according to the circumstances of each case, when such rules or principles will not furnish an exact measure of justice between the parties. Neither can any rules or principles be laid down which will be of absolute obligation or authority in all cases. Young v. Daniels, 2 Iowa 127, 63 Am. Dec. 477; Zundelowitz v. Webster, 96 Iowa 587, 65 N. W. 835; Thurston v. Arnold, 43 Iowa 43.

With these settled rules, we turn to the evidence in this case.

Hannah Parrott, mother of the plaintiff, testified that a day or so after the birth of the plaintiff, Fannie L. Burwell and Asa Bur-well were at her home and “they (the Burwells) asked to name her Fannie Luella, now only we just gave her Luella, and they promised her home and contents as they left it when they died, that she would have that.” This answer was duly objected to. She further testified:

“Well, first they asked to name her and made the proposal and I consented to it, and they both were satisfied. They said they would give their name if they named her. We told them they could name her and it would he satisfactory, and she could go by that name. Luella. They wanted to name her and would name her Luella; that is what they said they would name her. The baby we were talking about was the plaintiff. The Burwells lived on a ten acre tract they owned some distance from our home and later moved nearer to us on a 28 acre tract, and then they moved to Exira.”

Later the witness says she talked to the Burwells, and Asa, just a few days before he died, told her he intended her (Luella) to have the home and contents and all when they were passed away.

“Fannie told me that the home was to be Luella’s the last conversation we had about it. The girl visited back and forth with the Burwells, they seemed pleased to have her visit them. When they were sick they always called and she answered their calls. She nursed Asa in his last illness and cared for him until his death. She cared for Fannie in her sickness until others stepped in and took charge. After this time, Mr. and Mrs. Burwell mentioned or referred to this conversation and to the fact of the naming of Luella.

“Q. Well, now, going back, there is considerable period between that time and time that you say they named the baby, in *1161 the meantime, has Fannie Burwell or Asa Burwell referred to the fact of. the naming of this girl and this home? A. Yes sir. They always said that Luella was just the same as a daughter to them, and they named her and wanted her to have the home for the name.”

One Hensley, who lived in the same block with the Burwells, testified to a conversation with-Asa Burwell about the property in Exira. He said: “He (Asa) as good as said that this would be her property at the time of their death. Fannie was present.

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247 N.W. 676, 215 Iowa 1157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-fowler-iowa-1933.