Blum v. Keene

63 N.W.2d 197, 245 Iowa 867, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 9, 1954
Docket48346
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 63 N.W.2d 197 (Blum v. Keene) 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
Blum v. Keene, 63 N.W.2d 197, 245 Iowa 867, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 378 (iowa 1954).

Opinion

Bliss, O. J.'

— On Juné 7, 1951, defendants executed two instruments, one conveying by warranty deed to plaintiffs Lots *869 113, 120 and 121 in Linehan Park Addition in Dubuque Township, in Dubuque County, Iowa, on’which there were two buildings ; the other instrument was a bill of sale conveying to plaintiffs certain described personal property used in the operation of a motor vehicle service station, garage, restaurant, and lodging rooms by defendants on said property. The consideration in each instrument’was “one dollar and other valuable, considerations in hand paid”, by plaintiffs. Each was duly signed and acknowledged by defendants and filed for record by Mr. Blum on the day of execution. Possession was to be given, as appears from testimony for plaintiffs, within thirty days, or by July 7, 1951. Defendants having refused to surrender the property, the petition of plaintiffs was filed August 17, 1351, and upon answer being filed alleging that the instruments did not and were not intended to convey absolute title, but were in fact mortgages to secure indebtedness owing plaintiffs by defendants, the justice of the peace, on motion of defendants, under section 601.37, Code of 1950, transferred the action to the district court.

At a pretrial conference the parties stipulated that the only issue to be tried and determined was whether the deed and the bill of sale conveyed absolute title to the properties described in each instrument to plaintiffs or whether they were given to secure indebtedness to them.

It was also stipulated, first, that if the court found the instruments were absolute conveyances, it should find and determine that plaintiffs have the right to possession of the property described in each, and the reasonable rental value of the same for the time they had been wrongfully deprived of its possession; and second, that if the court found that said instruments were given only for security purposes, then it will determine the amount of the indebtedness owing plaintiffs, and so secured, and render judgment accordingly.

• Plaintiffs, at the trial for their main case, introduced the warranty deed and the bill of sale, and the testimony of one witness that in his opinion the fair and reasonable rental value of the property involved was $150 a month.

For their main ease defendants introduced the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Keene and two witnesses as to property values.

*870 The court ordered, adjudged and decreed that plaintiffs had fee simple title to the real estate, title to all personal property-located thereon, were entitled to possession of said real estate and personal property, and that a writ of execution be issued depriving defendants of possession and placing plaintiffs in possession. The court also found that the reasonable rental value of the real estate was $150 a month and that plaintiffs have judgment against defendants in the sum of $2750 for such rental from July 7, 1951 to January 17, 1953, the date of the judgment and decree.

The facts are controlling and determinative of the case and the de novo appeal, and the credibility of much of the testimony is an important factor in appraising its probative worth.

The printed record before us has 385 pages, much of it by question and answer, presumably on the theory that the truth of the testimony may thereby be better ascertained. Appellants’ opening argument has 110 pages and their reply 87 pages.. Appellees’ brief and argument contains 95 pages. There have been certified to this court the reporter’s transcript of 471 pages, a voluminous transcript of all proceedings in the lower courts, and numerous exhibits.

The parties are all adults, but their ages are not shown. All parties are residents of Dubuque County. Mr. Blum was in the coin-operating-machine business, consisting of mechanical amusements of various kinds, all operated and played by the insertion of coins, such as music boxes, pin games, shuffle alleys, shuffle bowling machines and other similar types. He serviced his own machines and also like machines of others. He owned a majority of such machines in that locality — between 100 and 120 of them. He both sold and leased them. He did not own nor operate slot machines of the “one-armed bandit” type.

Defendant Donald J. Keene, before World War II, owned his home and worked in a meat-packing plant. On his return from service in that war early in 1944 he acquired a tavern for $4000, known as “The Tops Tavern”, which he operated for about two years and then sold the tavern, without the stock of merchandise, for $8000. The stock he sold to others for “$1000 or $1500”, he was not sure which. His Avife testified he received $4000 for the stock.

*871 He then bought the three lots involved in this litigation. The real estate in that locality has disadvantages. Much of it is swampy. He indicated that one of these lots, No. 119, was not of much value, as it was swampy and had a deep hole. He said he acquired it by quitclaim deed, and that he paid $800 for the other two lots. The abstract, offered by defendants, shows that he acquired the three lots by one deed for one dollar and other valuable consideration, dated September 30, 1946. Prior to this time and in 1932 the State Highway Commission had condemned the westerly 16 feet of Lot 121, for highway purposes. The plat of the addition shows that the real estate involved lies east of and abuts on highway 52 for 100 feet, and has a depth of 46 feet. Donald Keene had a truck and in the earlier months of 1946 and prior to receiving his deed to the lots he began filling them to a depth of from six to twelve feet, and with what he hauled himself and bought from others he put in about 2500 truckloads, worth, as he testified, about $3 a load. He said he kept track of the loads on a sheet of paper in the cab of the truck.

On this fresh fill he began the construction of the main building about July 1946, the dimensioiis of which were 50 feet in length and 30 feet in width or depth. He did the construction work himself and with such labor as he hired. He put in a concrete foundation five feet high and eight inches thick except in front, where it was a foot thick and reinforced. A concrete floor, four inches thick, was put in the basement. • He needed money to do the filling and construction work and early in 1946 began borrowing money from Mr. Blum, in periodic sums of from $200 to $500. It was done in a rather lax way. Either Keene or his wife would go to the Blum home and if Mr. Blum was not there Mrs. Blum would attend to the matter. A blank cheek would be torn from a pad which Mr. Keene would sign, or if it was Mrs. Keene she would sign, and Mr. or Mrs. Blum would insert the details and the amount borrowed. This borrowing was kept up in 1946 until the Keenes had received $4250 from plaintiffs. There is no evidence that they refused to loan any more. In fact he loaned defendants money on their car in 1947.

*872 While these evidences of indebtedness to the plaintiffs were noted on blank checks, they were not in fact checks drawn by Mr. Keene or his wife on any bank in which they or either of them had a cheeking account. There was no such checking account. These slips of paper were simply memoranda signed by either of them as evidence of the borrowings.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.W.2d 197, 245 Iowa 867, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blum-v-keene-iowa-1954.