Benson v. Custer

17 N.W.2d 889, 236 Iowa 345, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 436
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 6, 1945
DocketNo. 46601.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 17 N.W.2d 889 (Benson v. Custer) 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
Benson v. Custer, 17 N.W.2d 889, 236 Iowa 345, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 436 (iowa 1945).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Two farms in the same township are involved in this suit: one of two hundred forty acres in Section 21; the other of one hundred sixty acres in Section 34. We shall hereafter refer to them merely by section numbers.

Both farms belonged to Matthew Custer, Sr. at the time *347 of his death in 1927. He devised them to his son, John T. Custer, for life with remainder to John’s two children, plaintiff Helen Benson and Dr. M. L. Custer, now deceased, late of St. Louis, Missouri. Dr. Custer is sometimes referred to in the record as Lee Custer, also known as Matthew L. Custer.

Upon the death of their father, John T. Custer, in 1933, plaintiff and her brother each became the owner of an undivided interest in both farms, and following the administration of his estate a division was made so that Dr. Custer became full owner of the land in Section 34. He died August 27, 1937.

I. On November 11, 1935, appellee and. her husband executed to her brother a quitclaim deed (Exhibit A in the record) to her half interest in the farm in Section 21. The doctor at that time gave her his note for $7,200, which was afterward paid. The deed was delivered but never recorded. Appellee contends that Dr. Custer handed it back to her the same day, saying:

“Here Helen is the deed to the farm that I have tallied to you about, that I want you to have, and the deeds to the other farm. The rest of the property and this farm T will send you up as soon as I can arrange for it.”

Appellee’s husband, Ralph Benson, so testified after first qualifying himself by the usual showing that he took no part in the conversation.

The trial court held the return of Exhibit A to appellee did not reinvest her with the title and ownership of the half interest involved in the transaction. She appeals from that part of the decree.

We do not find it necessary to pass on Mr. Benson’s competency. We agree with the trial court that, “There is nothing in the record suggesting that at this time Dr. Custer had formed any intention of giving the plaintiff any land.”

Even if the husband as a self-qualified witness be held competent so to testify we are not required to accept his testimony at face value. It seems unreasonable that the doctor would go through the idle formality of buying his sister’s interest only to give it immediately back to her. The deed bore *348 $7.50 internal revenue stamps. There was an easiér way to make her a present,of $7,200 if'that was the pui’pos’e.

We agree further with the trial court that it is more reasonable to suppose “Dr. Custer was concerned in concealing his interest in the Iowa land.” Mr' Benson’s testimony must be considered in the light of all the circumstances. As we said in Peck v. Foggy, 199 Iowa 922, 924, 925, 202 N. W. 754, 755:

“ * * * the court is under special duty -to scan and to scrutinize closely, and to put such evidence to every test of credibility available to it, in the record. * * * the court must be able to say that the evidence is not simply sufficient to make a prima-facie case, but that it is sufficient, in the light of all-the circumstances, to carry conviction to the mind of the court, of its essential credibility.”

See, also, Bosserman v. Watson, 230 Iowa 627, 298 N. W804; Peterson v. Citizens State Bank, 228 Iowa 219, 290 N. W. 546; and Holmes v. Connable, 111 Iowa 298, 82 N. W. 780.

Appellee argues that the voluntary surrender of an unrecorded deed by the grantee to the grantor, with intention of relinquishing all title conveyed thereby, accepted by the grantor with that understanding, “will estop grantee, or anyone claiming under him, from asserting any further rights thereunder.” Brown v. Brown, 142 Iowa 125, 120 N. W. 724; Matheson v. Matheson, 139 Iowa 511, 517, 117 N. W. 755, 18 L. R. A., N. S., 1167; and Conway v. Rock, 139 Iowa 162, 117 N. W. 273, are cited in support of the proposition.

It will be conceded that if the other elements of estoppel are also present the proposition is sound. In the Brown case, supra, 142 Iowa 125, 133, 120 N. W. 724, 727, we added to the rule as stated by appellee this important qualification:

“ * * * and accepted by the grantor as such relinquishment in consideration of other agreements between the parties founded thereon * * (Italics supplied.)

The other cases cited by appellee are not in point and their language is not applicable here.

In the instant case there is no element of estoppel. There were no “other agreements * * * founded thereon” and no *349 change of position by appellee in reliance upon or caused by Dr. Custer’s alleged act in returning the deed to her. He thereafter paid the consideration, received the income from the property, and kept up the taxes.

We affirm the decision of the trial court upon plaintiff’s appeal.

II. The transaction of November 11, 1935, occurred at Jefferson, Iowa, and at the Benson home near there. Dr. Custer thereafter returned to St. Louis and on November 27th, executed and mailed to appellee two quitclaim deeds with no descriptions filled in. The letter accompanying them is not in evidence.

In one of these deeds, known in the record as Exhibit B, the description of an undivided one-half interest in the farm in Section 21 was later inserted, and in the other, Exhibit C, the description of the land in Section 34. As thus completed the deeds were recorded on November 29, 1935. They constitute the basis of appellee’s present claim of ownership of the land in Section 34 and of the other one-half interest in the land in Section 21.

On November 29, 1935, the same day Exhibits B and C were completed and recorded, appellee and her husband signed and acknowledged two deeds back to Dr. Custer, one, Exhibit D, covering the land in Section 34; the other, Exhibit 1, purporting to cover an undivided half interest in the land in Section 21. Later the description in the latter was found to be slightly erroneous and a new deed (Exhibit E) was drawn, dated December 12, 1936, covering, however, the full interest in the land described.

Exhibits D and E were, after the doctor’s death, turned over by appellant Mildred Custer to his Missouri executor, who caused them to be recorded on September 23, 1937. Appellee seeks to set them aside, claiming the delivery to Dr. Custer was conditional. From the trial court’s decree in favor of plaintiff on this issue the defendants appeal.

At the time of these various deed transactions Dr. Custer was single. His wife had procured a divorce from him on June 10, 1934. She later remarried and is appellant Cecille Wielandy herein. Appellant Betty Lou Custer is their minor daughter *350 and appellant Boatmen’s National Bank is trustee under Dr. Ouster’s will for the benefit of Betty Lou.

Before he died Dr. Custer married appellant Mildred Custer, née Stewart, on June 35, 1936. She had been his office nurse and secretary'since 1933 and continued to work in his office until his death.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.W.2d 889, 236 Iowa 345, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benson-v-custer-iowa-1945.