Bell v. Pierschbacher

62 N.W.2d 784, 245 Iowa 436, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 9, 1954
Docket48403
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 62 N.W.2d 784 (Bell v. Pierschbacher) 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
Bell v. Pierschbacher, 62 N.W.2d 784, 245 Iowa 436, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 374 (iowa 1954).

Opinion

Garfield, J.

— This is an action in equity for specific performance of an alleged oral' contract of decedent, M. D. Bell, under which plaintiff Earl H. Bell, an adopted son, claims to own the personal property left by decedent and a life estate in a farm of about 120 acres, and plaintiff Lloyd C. Bell, Earl’s son, claims the remainder interest in the farm. Defendants Delman T. and LaVon Pierschbacher, husband and wife, are grantees of a deed to the farm from decedent and legatees of substantially all his personalty. For convenience we disregard the fact that Delman as executor of the will of M. D. Bell is also a defendant.

After trial the district court held proof of the claimed oral contract was not clear, satisfactory and convincing, dismissed plaintiffs’ petition, and quieted title to the farm in defendants.

While our review is de novo (rule 334, Rules of Civil Procedure), we give weight to the trial court’s findings. The case involves quite larg’ely fact questions which the trial court was in better position than we to decide. Owen v. Wilden Hospital, Inc., 245 Iowa 382, 62 N.W.2d 186; Salem v. Salem, 245 Iowa 62, 70, 60 N.W.2d 772, 776; England v. England, 243 Iowa 274, 278, 51 N.W.2d 437, 440.

As plaintiffs concede, proof of the claimed oral contract must be clear, satisfactory and convincing. A mere preponderance of the evidence is not sufficient. Vanston v. Rupe, 244 Iowa 609, 618, 57 N.W.2d 546, 551; England v. England, supra, 243 Iowa 274, 278, 51 N.W.2d 437, 439; Byers v. Byers, *440 242 Iowa 391, 409, 46 N.W.2d 800, 809; Williams v. Harrison, 228 Iowa 715, 723, 293 N.W. 41.

We,are not persuaded,plaintiffs have established their case by the requisite degree of proof. .

Decedent, M. D...Bell, owned'and occupied the farm in controversy until he died March 17, 1952. His wife Louella. also lived there until she died in January 1945. Plaintiff Earl H. Bell, fifty at time of trial, and his brother Wheeler were adopted by M. D. Bell and wife and went to the Bell farm to live in 1911 when Earl was nine. They were sons of Richard Halleek, a cousin of Louella Bell.' The Bells had no children of their own.

Earl helped with1 the farm work until he moved to another farm when he was about twenty-four, a year or so after he was married in 1925. In 1932 his wife and daughter died and Earl, with his son Lloyd, twenty-five at time of trial,- returned to the Bell farm. In 1943 Earl began working for the Beatrice Creamery in • Chariton but continued to live in the Bell home. Mrs. Bell was bedfast from the spring of' 1944 or perhaps earlier until she died. Earl cared for her at night. Mr. Bell and a housekeeper cared for her during the day.

' In November 1944,' Mr. Bell wrote Lloyd Halleek, a blood brother of Earl Bell, that Mrs. Bell was “awful sick” and if he wanted to see her he ought to come down from Waterloo to do so. Halleek then came to the Bell farm from 'Waterloo. He testifies Mr. and Mrs. Bell' both said ’they wished Earl was home.' “I said if you’d give Earl a good deal' you might give him something to work for.” Halleek offered to drive Mr. Bell to Chariton to talk to Earl. Halleek says he and Mr. Bell then went to Chariton and “We talked the subject over and Melville [M. D. Bell] gave Eárl the proposition to stay on the farm as long as Mother was alive and he had a 50-50 proposition with the understanding he’d use the farm until he died and then it’d take to Earl and then Lloyd.” 1

“Q. [By plaintiffs’ counsel] Was that .the substance of what Melville said to Earl? A. Yes sir.

“Q. What if anything did Earl say? A. Well I guess they come to an agreement.

*441 “Q. What did Earl say whether or .not he would accept it? A. They must have made an agreement because he went' back there; ' ■ ' ’

“Mr. Garrett [defendants’ counsel]: I move to strike- the last two answers as-an opinion or guess.

“Mr. Stuart: I admit that may go out. Was it talked? A. It was talked over, yes. ' -

“Q. And Melville submitted the proposition you have related? A. Yes: ' ■ , :

“Q-. What did Earl say when his father made him that proposition? A. He said he’d go back out there.”

Evidently . plaintiffs were not entirely satisfied with, the above testimony because at the close of defendants’ evidence we find this record:- .

“Mr. Stuart: Plaintiffs desire to recall Lloyd Ilalleck and he has returned to AVaterloo, and plaintiffs request until tomorrow morning to produce this witness, and claim if he were present he Would-testify in reference to the'-'conversatioii betwéén' him, Earl Bell and M. D. Bell about which he has given some testimony, that' at the time M. D. Bell proposed to Earl Béll- that if- he would come back to the farm' and stay and help take care of Mrs. Bell ’so long as she lived and do the farming, that he would fix his business so that when he died, the- prop-' erty would go to Earl and then to Earl’s boy.

“Mr. Garrett: Defendants, Avhile denying1 the truth of any such testimony, admit, in order that it may not be necessary to recall the witness, he 'Avould so testify if he were present.”

We have set .out the testimony of Lloyd Halleck, fully because it is the only direct evidence, of the oral agreement alleged by plaintiffs. The rest of plaintiffs’ case consists largely, of claimed declarations of M. D. Bell made after Earl gave'-up his job -in Chariton and returned- to the farm, about' December .1, 1944. While plaintiffs contend Earl fully performed his part of the agreement between December 1 and Mrs. Bell’s death the following month (the exact date of her death is not shown) Earl stayed on the farm until February 1947, 'when he left permanently. Earl says his mother’s condition was “very *442 serious” when he returned to the farm. In the meantime Earl’s son Lloyd was inducted into military service the last of September 1946 until January 12, 19'48. Lloyd did not live on the farm after September 1946.

In July 1945, Earl married a second time. His second wife had been married before and had two children. They all made their home with M. D. Bell until February 1947. Evidently M. D. Bell did not like the way Earl did the farm work nor did he entirely approve of the conduct of Earl and his second wife and did not always get along well with them. He was disappointed that Lloyd would not return to the farm when he was discharged from the service.

¥e refer now to evidence of claimed declarations made by M. D. Bell. Mrs. Decker, the Bells’ housekeeper from January 1944 until July 1945, when Earl was married again, says that one time after Mrs. Bell died she asked M. D. Bell “where the place go to when he was gone; well, he said that goes to the Bells, it’ll stay in the Bells’ name all the time. He mean Earl and Lloyd. He said it more than once.” Mrs.

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62 N.W.2d 784, 245 Iowa 436, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-pierschbacher-iowa-1954.