Calhoun v. Taylor

178 Iowa 56
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 18, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 178 Iowa 56 (Calhoun v. Taylor) 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
Calhoun v. Taylor, 178 Iowa 56 (iowa 1916).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

The issue tried was whether conveyances executed by decedent to six of his children and money given another should be treated as advancements or be regarded as absolute gifts. He died September 25, 1913, well advanced in years. Four of the deeds were executed June 26, 1912, and the other two, October 1st following. He died seized of 80 acres of land, and there remained of his personal estate for distribution $4,445.05. The cause was tried as at law, and is here reviewed on errors assigned.

1. Evidence: opinion evi dence: relevancy : irrelevant rendered relevant: values.

2 descent and advancements: bearingonin? tent. evidence.

3. Descent and DISTRIBUTION J advancements: valuation: rule to determine. I. Several witnesses, after qualifying, were asked to state the market value of land alleged to have been conveyed by way of an advancement, at the time of such conveyance, also at the time of decedent’s death, and some testified to values at the time of the trial. Those speaking of values at the time of -the trial estimated, in connection therewith, the rise in value since decedent’s death, and in that way rendered the evidence relevant. Proof of the vaiues °f the several tracts at the. time conveyed was admissible as bearing on the intent of the grantor in making the conveyanceg; Evidence of the values of the several-tracts, if retained by the grantee, about the time of decedent’s death, in the same condition as when conveyed, was admissible; for such values were the measure of the respective advancements, if held to be such. Finch v. Garrett, 102 [61]*61Iowa 881; Eastwood v. Crane, 125 Iowa 707. Such were the rulings of the trial court, and they are approved.

4. descent and advancements: tribntfonf evil dene© II. The inventory and appraisement of the personal property left by decedent, claims filed and the annual report of the administrator, showing full settlement of the estate an(l the amount on hand, were received in evidence over objection, and rightly so. This was for the purpose of showing that there was property in the hands of the administrator, available in connection with advancements for equalization among the several children.

5. Witnesses: competency: transactions with deceased: nonparticipation. III. The husband of plaintiff testified to having heard a conversation between decedent and plaintiff, in which he (the witness) took no part, and in which, decedent said, in substance, that plaintiff should have as much out of the estate as other children; that he had given them land and had given her money; and that he wanted his property equally divided. On cross-examination, it appeared that the witness had engaged in conversation with decedent on other subjects while at the table, but had not participated in that concerning his dealings with his children. That the witness may have spoken with decedent on some other subjects disconnected from the conversation exclusively between father and daughter did not preclude him from testifying «to what was said in the latter. The test is whether the witness objected to as incompetent took part in the particular conversation on the subject inquired about, and if he did not, his testimony is to be received for what it is worth. Dettmer v. Behrens, 106 Iowa 585; McElroy v. Allfree, 131 Iowa 112; McBride v. McBride, 142 Iowa 169. Tebbs v. Jarvis, 139 Iowa 428, is not inconsistent with this conclusion, for there the evidence disclosed that the communication excluded was directly to the witness ruled to be incompetent.

[62]*626' distoibution: intent of intes[61]*61IV. A nephew of decedent testified to having had a conversation with him “a little while before his death,” and [62]*62was then asked, “What was said by your uncle in reference to what he had done with his property?” An objection as incompetent and not conxiected with, the ves gestae was sustained. Counsel for defendants then stated what they proposed to prove, and the ruling was not changed. This was excluded. Like inquiries and rulings occurred in. examining several other witnesses. What decedent may have said after the execution of the deeds, in no manner connected with the res gestae, according to the ruling in Ellis v. Newell, 120 Iowa 71, was rightly excluded.

7. ’Witnesses: competency: transactions with deceased: administrator as nominal defendant : effect. V. Josephus Whiles, after testifying that he gave his father a deed to 80 acres of land in Kansas and received from him the conveyance of 80 acres of land in Appanoose County, was asked what, if anything, decedent had said concerning the reason for wanting to make the exchange. An objection that the witness was incompetent to testify under Section 4604 of the Code was sustained. Thereupon, counsel for defendants stated what was proposed to be proven. Somewhat similar questions were propounded to Sylvester and L. C. Wailes, and like rulings made. This is said to have been error, for that the administrator was a party defendant and' joined the other defendants in their answer, and it is said that, inasmuch as the witnesses were called by the administrator, the prohibition of the statute was thereby waived, and they should have been permitted to answer. Such is undoubtedly the rule where the administrator is the real party in interest. Dean v. Carpenter, 134 Iowa 275; Frick v. Kabaker, 116 Iowa 494.

But the administrator was indifferent as between the parties and not interested in the outcome of the litigation. The evidence tendered was in no sense against the administrator as such. Counsel for appellants present the question as though the administrator’s being a party would be controlling; but Section 4604 of the Code prohibits any party to [63]*63ail action, or any person interested in the event thereof from being examined in regard to any transaction or communication between such witness and decedent “against the administrator.” The testimony sought to be elicited was not and could not well have been against him. Moreover, as the other defendants were next of kin, the testimony must have been excluded as to them on the objection interposed, and, if excluded as to them and admitted as to the administrator, it would have had no bearing on the issues being tried. As the administrator was a nominal party, made such to enable the court to give directions as to the distribution of the property in his hands, upon deciding the controversy between the heirs of decedent, and as the only possible bearing of the evidence tendered was on such controversy, we are of opinion that the court rightly ruled that, by Section 4604 of the Code, the several witnesses were rendered incompetent to testify.

YI. On April 19, 1898, decedent conveyed to James A. Wailes 80 acres of land, with this stipulation in the deed:

distribution : agreement to ’ relinquish interest in estate: subsequent ad-effectment: “$1,000 on the above consideration given to the grantee herein, who is my son, which is an advancement to mm m in.ll oi ms interest as an heir in my estate, either at this or at any future , . time. I, James wailes, grantee, hereby accept r ^ie $^000 hereinbefore stated in full of my interest in my father’s estate.”

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Bluebook (online)
178 Iowa 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-v-taylor-iowa-1916.