Biddick v. Darragh

68 N.W.2d 285, 246 Iowa 518, 54 A.L.R. 2d 1, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 346
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1955
Docket48642
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 N.W.2d 285 (Biddick v. Darragh) 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
Biddick v. Darragh, 68 N.W.2d 285, 246 Iowa 518, 54 A.L.R. 2d 1, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 346 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

This is a phase of a suit to partition Lot 10, Block 35, Carpenters 5th Addition to Cedar Rapids. The parties hereto, Anna Catherine Drahos (now Darragh) and Anthony Homolka, were defendants in the partition suit. Anna is a granddaughter and also the adopted daughter of Anthony and his deceased wife, who died in July 1943. October 1, 1943, Anthony gave Anna a quitclaim deed to his interest in the property, reserving to himself a life estate. His interest was adjudicated to have been an undivided seven-ninths share of the property. After the partition sale but before distribution of the proceeds Anna filed an application or cross-petition against *520 Anthony for an accounting, claiming $5000 damages for waste on the buildings, wilfully and maliciously committed by him.

The issues raised by this cross-petition and Anthony’s answer were tried to the court in equity. During the trial Anna amended the prayer of her petition by asking treble damages. Section 658.1, Code of Iowa, 1954, provides a tenant for life of real property is liable fox treble damages for waste- thereon committed by him. Section 658.3 states: “Any person whose duty it is to prevent waste, and who fails to use reasonable and ordinary care to avert the same, shall be held to have committed it.”

The trial resulted in an adjudication fixing Anthony’s liability to Anna for waste at $4666.65. Anthony was credited with $173.29 for repairs and improvements, with $1778.81, for seven ninths of the principal of the mortgage debt paid by him. and with his interest in the property, valued by the court at $1876.73. After these deductions the balance found due from Anthony to- Anna was $837.82, for which amount judgment was rendered against him. He has appealed.

At the time of the trial Anthony Homolka was eighty-three years old. He had formerly operated a grocery and meat market. For years after that he did little odd jobs to support himself and his wife. He purchased the lot here in question (apparently for his wife) about the year 1901, for $2300. Upon it were three old houses built about 1850 or 1860. Anthony testified they were not well kept up and were just common little shacks. He moved one of them to one side, repaired it, and lived in it for some years. It was an “oldtimer” without plaster ceilings. The other houses were not moved. They were occupied by tenants. Anthony built a store building on the corner of the lot.

He testified he did the repair work on the buildings before his wife died (in 1943). She did not like to spend the money to keep them in good condition and he made repairs in patchwork fashion from odds and ends. She also owned the adjoining lot upon which there were two old unpainted and roofless barns. The fire marshal ordered these removed. Anthony’s wife was *521 in bad health and he was doing the housework and was unable to tear them down.

When his wife died the gross rentals from the buildings on the lot were $50 per month. The property had been mortgaged some years previously and the amount then owed thereon, about $3500, was due in monthly payments.of $45, which included interest. As the life tenant, Anthony was required to pay the interest on the mortgage and the taxes upon the real estate. Moreover, it developed that, as a practical proposition, he was required to make the monthly principal payments on the mortgage, also, to prevent default. He testified: “Well, after my wife died' everybody went home, nobody said nothin * * *. My granddaughter [Anna] had no money, my daughter didn’t feel like paying it, so * * * I just had to páy it. Had to take it over, keep it up; nobody offered to pay anything.”

Following the death of his wife, in July 1943, Anthony proceeded to comply with the order to remove the derelict barns on the adjoining lot. “Afterwards when I seen I was getting only $50 a month out of the rent and paying $45 on the payments I figured I would have to go to work. * * * I got sick in the winter after tearing them barns down * * He was then drawing a pension of $20 per month. The next spring he worked in a meat market for a few weeks but again became weak and his doctor directed him to stop working. Thereafter, the only work he did was to make repairs upon the property here involved.

Grace Biddick, plaintiff in the partition suit and a daughter of Anthony, testified concerning the condition of the property at her mother’s death:

“Well, before my mother died * * * was during the depression. They had a hard time collecting rent most of the time, or part of the time anyway. And they had no money to go into any — much repair of any kind. Whenever there was any repairs to be done my father did the repairing. I don’t ever remember ever seeing a carpenter or a plumber or anything brought in to do any repair work. And my dad did all the repair work that was done. * * * Even plumbing leaks, my dad repaired. * * * Well, I think he did more to repair [after her *522 death.] than my mother did. * * * where we lived, 821 Tenth Avenue, of course the plumbing was always bad there. * * * One time I was visiting there and the plaster fell from the ceiling. * * * And the plumbing was about through, always had been. I remember one time the water run down the side of a wall and my mother turning off the water, and then they did try to repair it. The lavatory was bad, and rather than repair it or fix it she just took the lavatory out and sealed up the pipes. Also where * * * just one electric outlet in the dining room from which we stretched wires in the living room.”

She testified the floors “weren’t good and they weren’t bad. In the bathroom around where the water leaked was bad — rotted.” The eaves and spouting around the house were not very good — “I can remember that along that side porch the water always dropped around there. The water was always making puddles.”

The property at 1005 Ninth Street “never was taken care of very well, it was always just made to do and that was all. There was no money spent on it. If it needed anything mother made dad just nail it together or do whatever he could; he was no carpenter, he was a butcher.”

The roofs of the buildings were in such condition that three new roofs were required the first three years after the death of Anthony’s wife. During this period Anthony himself painted the outside of all the buildings. At 821 Tenth Avenue: “Well, I put a new roof on there, painted the whole house, and put new electric wiring in there. We used to use gas — gas lights. When my wife couldn’t get the gas mantles any more she put a plug in the dining room and made me stretch wires all over the place. When I rented the house I figured it wasn’t very safe, three children and all of those wires running from the basement, so I had — had it wired. * * * The wiring and fixtures [cost] around $125.” The new roof cost $275.

He kept up the interiors of the houses for a couple of years, then prices increased but the rents were at depression levels and he was unable to increase them on account of rent controls then in effect. He told the tenants he would do the work if they *523 would buy the paint and paper but he did not have the money to buy the materials.

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Related

In the Matter of Estate of Gauch
308 N.W.2d 88 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1981)
Hodny v. Hoyt
243 N.W.2d 350 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1976)
Offermann v. Dickinson
175 N.W.2d 423 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1970)
Homolka v. Drahos
74 N.W.2d 589 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.W.2d 285, 246 Iowa 518, 54 A.L.R. 2d 1, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biddick-v-darragh-iowa-1955.