Burch v. Wickliff

227 N.W. 133, 209 Iowa 582
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 22, 1929
DocketNo. 39860.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 227 N.W. 133 (Burch v. Wickliff) 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
Burch v. Wickliff, 227 N.W. 133, 209 Iowa 582 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

—The real estate involved is an 80-acre farm located approximately 5 miles northwest of Knoxville. Dispute arises between the parties as to who is the owner of the realty. On the one hand, plaintiff-appellant claims said real property; while, on the other, the defendant-appellee J. A. Wickliff asserts that it belongs to him. So the appellant seeks to oust the appellees from the possession thereof, and in response thereto, the latter ask that their title therein be quieted against the former.

Appellant became the owner of the premises about May 24, 1894. A deed thereto was given him by his stepmother, Amelia Burch. No transfer of the 80-acre tract, through deed or other written document, was ever made by' appellant to the appellee J. A. Wickliff, or any other person. J. A. Wickliff, the appellee, asserts that he acquired title through adverse possession for a period exceeding 10 years, under “claim of right” based upon an oral contract of purchase. This oral agreement, according to the appellees’ testimony, arose in March, 1903. Some preliminary facts leading up to the event will perhaps aid the understanding. Appellee J. A. Wickliff was employed by the appellant sometime before the year 1900. On February 28, 1900, the *584 appellees, who are husband and wife, moved on the farm as the tenants of the appellant. That tenancy was for a term of three years. At the end thereof, as before suggested, the appellees maintain that the appellant orally agreed to and did sell the disputed realty to the appellee J. A. Wickliff, for an agreed consideration of $50 an acre, which, in the aggregate, is $4,000. Opposed to that contention is the assertion of appellant that, at the end of said 3-year term, new tenancy was contracted for another term. He declares there was no sale.

I. After carefully considering the entire record, however, we are constrained to hold that, on or about the time alleged, the appellant did enter into said oral agreement with the áppellee J. A. Wickliff for the sale of the farm. In support of this eon-elusion may be found both direct and circumstantial evidence.

Mr. Wickliff, the appellee, says unequivocally that he made the purchase in the manner and way above set forth. Contradictory to Mr. Wickliff’s statements in this regard is the testimony of the appellant in denial thereof, although, in so doing, the appellant does admit that he and the appellee J. A. Wickliff did have some talk in 1903 concerning the purchase of the property by the latter from the former. It is said by the appellant that terms were not agreed upon, and that he executed a deed in blank, and left it with one Freel, at Pleasantville (a town near Knoxville), for delivery to whosoever might buy, and pay the required purchase price. Corroboration for appellee Wickliff, nevertheless, appears in the testimony of his wife, the other ap-pellee. She says:

“I did not hear any conversation or know of any conversation about the purchase of this land from Mr. Burch [appellant] at the time it was done; I knew it that day when he [appellee J. A. Wickliff] came home. Mr. Wickliff [appellee] told me. * * # I saw Mr. Wickliff [appellee] hand Mr. Burch [appellant] a check. I think the amount was something over $300. * ® * The first time I heard any talk about buying this land or selling this farm was the spring we [appellees] bought it. # * I knew they [appellant and appellee J. A. Wickliff] were talking about selling the place, instead of leasing it, because Mr. Burch [appellant] and Mr. Wickliff [appellee] told me he [appellee J. A. Wickliff] had bought it. They [appellant and appellee J. A. *585 AVickliff] told me that, not long after we [appellees] bought it, in 1903. Mr. Burch [appellant] said to me: ‘ A1 [appellee] bought it/ and he [appellant] thought it was a pretty good idea. ’ ’

Furthermore, corroboration of appellees’ claim is found in the testimony of State Senator AV. A. Clarke, appellant’s brother-in-law. Senator Clarke said:

“ # # =» j had heard that Mr. AVickliff [appellee] had bought the 80 acres in controversy. That was talked probably in 1903 or 1904. In fact, Mr. AVickliff [appellee] had told me that he had bought it, so I said to Mr. Burch [appellant] one day ° * *: 'I understand that AVickliff [appellee] bought your farm,’ or words to that effect, and he answered me in this way: ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘we [appellant and appellee J. A. AVickliff] have had a kind of a contract.’ ”

Circumstantial evidence also lends strong support for the proposition that the property was sold to appellee. From the date of the alleged transaction until the commencement of this suit, appellant at no time demanded rent from appellee. About 1905, appellant left the community and went to Colorado. During that period, appellees were in possession of the real estate. Then, in two or three years, appellant returned from Colorado, and again lived at or near Pleasantville, the vicinity of the farm in dispute. But appellant, although in the locality of the farm, did not in any way disturb appellee in his possession thereof, or demand any rent from him. Thereafter, in March, 1910, appel-lee again left Iowa, and did not return again until February, 1928. Apparently throughout such absence appellant paid no attention whatever to appellee’s land, and, so far as the former was concerned, the latter was at liberty to possess, manage, and use the premises as he saw fit. Important in this consideration is the fact that appellant owned another farm of 120 acres in the neighborhood, and some other property within a near-by town. Throughout all his absences, appellant left his brother-in-law, Senator Clarke, aforesaid, or some other reliable person, in charge of the 120 acres and the town property. Yet no one looked after or managed appellee’s 80 acres for appellant. If appellees are mistaken about their purchase of this farm, why did appellant *586 desert it, demand no rent for its use, and leave the appellees in possession, to do with it as they chose? Significant, too, is the fact that appellees, at all times after the alleged purchase, treated the 80 acres as their own. For instance, they “paid the insurance on buildings; moved, shingled, plastered, and refloored the house; built fences; cleaned out about three fourths of a mile of old hedge; constructed a cattle shed, 22x26; erected a henhouse, 32x32; made a cave; dug the well' deeper, and cemented it up; set out an orchard of small fruit trees; put in every fence post on the place; expended about $500 for woven-wire fences.”

‘ The appellees, it .is true, never received a deed from appellant. Explanation thereof is offered by the appellees. They say that, when the final payment was made, some talk was had with appellant in reference to a deed, and he gave them to believe that he ‘would make and deliver the same. Nevertheless, before this was done, he left the community, and remained out of Iowa for many years. Two attempts were made, it appears, to procure a deed from appellant after he left Iowa; because, on two different occasions, the appellee J. A. Wickliff had a deed prepáred, and mailed it to' the appellant, with the request that he sign, acknowledge, and return it. Such, however, was never done. Several years after the appellant left Iowa, he, through a letter, demanded of Freel the return of the blank deed above described, which was said to have been left with the latter in 1903. Hence, Freel returned it.

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Bluebook (online)
227 N.W. 133, 209 Iowa 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burch-v-wickliff-iowa-1929.