Blezek v. Blezek

284 N.W. 180, 226 Iowa 237
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 14, 1939
DocketNo. 44687.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 284 N.W. 180 (Blezek v. Blezek) 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
Blezek v. Blezek, 284 N.W. 180, 226 Iowa 237 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Richards, J.

One Joseph Blezek died testate on August 20, 1936, holding the record title to two tracts of land in Guthrie county, one comprising 80 the other 120 acres. Though in adjacent sections the tracts were not contiguous. A son Frank Blezek, a daughter Mary Zaruba, and two grandsons Kenneth and Earnest Blezek, were the beneficiaries of decedent’s will as well as his sole heirs at law. The son Frank brought this suit seeking to establish in himself the ownership of the 80-acre tract and to have partitioned the 120 acres. The grandsons answered, denying plaintiff’s ownership off the 80 acres, and filed a cross-petition praying that it also be partitioned. The trial court found for plaintiff, entered decree establishing in him the title to the 80 acres and decreed the partitioning of the other tract. The grandsons have appealed and argue one proposition, i. e., that the trial court erred in establishing in plaintiff the title to the 80 acres.

Plaintiff’s claim of ownership of the 80 acres was bottomed upon an oral contract alleged to have been made between him and his father, Joseph Blezek, in September or October 1906, and orally modified in 1930. Plaintiff alleged that on his part he has fully carried out the contract.

In 1904 the wife of Joseph Blezek, she being mother and grandmother of these litigants, departed this life. Up to that time the family had resided upon the 120 acres for many years. Plaintiff was a member of the household. He and his father, Joseph Blezek, continued to live upon the 120 acres, farming that and the 80-acre tract, until the fall of 1906, when plaintiff, after gathering the corn crop, removed to the nearby town of Yale, and taking his horses with him became engaged in teaming. Sometime in 1906 his father ceased active farming and thereafter, during the remainder of his life, leased the 120 acres to various tenants. After 1906 Joseph Blezek was in Jones county for a year or more among acquaintances. Then he became more or less permanently a resident of Cedar Rapids, living in a hotel during the greater part of the time until his decease. But during all the period following the year 1906 he frequently returned to Guthrie county, for periods of one or *239 two months, or even longer. It is the testimony of appellees Mary Zamba and Andrew Zamba that in September or October 1907, while Joseph Blezek was visiting in their farm home in Gnthrie county, plaintiff came out from Yale to the Zamba home to get his washing; that plaintiff finding his father there, remained for several hours. According to these witnesses there was upon that occasion a conversation between plaintiff and his father, the content of which allegedly constitutes an oral contract, on which plaintiff relies. According to-these two witnesses, Joseph Blezek in this conversation expressed to his son Frank concern about Frank’s staying in town, and said he, decedent, would rather see him (Frank) out on a farm, and asked Frank why he didn’t move out on the 80 acres; that Frank replied lie did not feel like so doing because everything had been moved off the 80 except the house and barn. Frank was referring to the fact that improvements including 5 -or 6 of the smaller buildings had been removed to an adjacent 80-acre tract as'.an incident to a voluntary partitioning of -a quarter section made up of the two eighties. ' Mary Zamba testified that following Frank’s statement with respect to improvements having been removed, decedent said in substance, “I will tell you what ■ I will do Frank, you give me $3 for my support and you can- improve the place to suit yourself, and you put on what you wish, and when I am through with it the place is yours.” Andrew’s testimony is of similar purport, he referring to the $3 as $3 per acre. Both witnesses testify that Frank said to his father that that was all right, that it suited him’ (Frank) all right, and that he would move out on the land the next spring; that his father replied that would be all-right, and told Frank to move out there and do things out there to suit himself.

At the time of this alleged transaction there were three of decedent’s children living, Frank, Mary and Joseph, Jr., tire latter being the father of the cross-petitioners: Decedent-had immigrated to this country from Bohemia and farming seems to have been his lifelong occupation, until he retired in 1906. There is abundant testimony, additional to that of the Zambas, that decedent had a strong desire that his son Frank be established upon a farm, rather than follow in town the occupation for which he had left the land. At the time of the alleged conversation Frank was about 22 years old, and the record shows that toward him decedent exhibited a strong attachment, *240 continuing to the end of the father’s life. The wife of Joseph Blezek was no - longer living. Two other sons, after reaching early manhood had died not very long previously. It appears that for himself -decedent desired to enjoy from his holdings only sufficient income that he might live comfortably. The full extent of his assets does not appear. The record convinces us that there was in decedent’s mind a distinct urge or motive quite consistent with and capable of being realized through the terms that made up the alleged agreement. The witnesses Zaruba testified to a transaction which, if it established a contract, lessened their own interests in the land. Mary Zaruba frankly admitted she did not like the cross-petitioners or their mother, but we note that the trial court, in an opinion filed, stated that after observing the appearance, manner and demeanor of the witnesses, there was nothing in any way indicating that the Zarubas were not telling the truth and that the trial court felt they truthfully told the conversation between the father and Frank as they understood it.

There is testimony of a considerable number of witnesses, who had been acquaintances and neighbors of Joseph Blezek. They say they conversed with him upon occasions when he returned to Guthrie county. They relate many of the decedent’s statements, allegedly made through the years Frank occupied the 80 acres, pertaining to decedent’s dealings with Frank. Appellants urge that these statements were mere expressions of decedent’s opinions as to what he intended to do with his property after he was through with it. For that reason, say appellants, this evidence is of no probative value as to the existence of the alleged contract. But there was more than this, more than indication of mere intention, isolated from other things. As related by these witnesses decedent’s statements frequently included two propositions or elements, (1) that it was Frank who was making the improvements on the 80 acres, and to suit himself, and (2) that the land was to be or would be Frank’s when decedent was through with it. The second element has the appearance of having been decedent’s- explanation for the first, the reason for the fact that Frank was making the improvements. At least the two propositions were co-related by decedent in what he stated. Other witnesses relate that decedent expressed himself in a still more definite manner, by saying in substance that the *241 80 acres is Frank’s. We look upon the testimony of the witnesses who related decedent’s statements, as being corroborative.

On or about March 1, 1908, plaintiff moved onto the eighty, and there resided continuously up to the time of the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
284 N.W. 180, 226 Iowa 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blezek-v-blezek-iowa-1939.