Carlson v. Smith

236 N.W. 387, 213 Iowa 231
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 5, 1931
DocketNo. 40314.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 236 N.W. 387 (Carlson v. Smith) 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
Carlson v. Smith, 236 N.W. 387, 213 Iowa 231 (iowa 1931).

Opinions

Faville, C. J.

On January 17, 1929, the appellee filed in the district court of Boone County, Iowa, a petition in equity asking to have a deed from the appellee to the appellant Marie Smith dated June 4, 1928, set aside.

For many years tlie appellee and his wife lived on a farm near Boone. Having no children of their own, they took into the family, when she was nine years of age, the appellant Marie Smith, who most if not all of the time thereafter passed under the name of Marie Carlson. She lived with the family until she was twenty-three, when she was married. While living with the Carlsons she was very active, not only in doing housework, but in assisting with the plowing, husking, milking, haying, and other general farm work, so long as the appellee lived on the farm. When Marie was about eighteen years of age, owing to the ill health of Mrs. Carlson, a home was established in Boone, where Marie lived, earing for Mrs. Carlson. After her marriage she was called to go with Mrs. Carlson to various hospitals and other places for medical relief and attention.

During this time the appellee remained on the farm. Marie frequently went out to the farm to work, returning to care for the house and Mrs. Carlson at the home in Boone at night. At the request of the Carlsons she, after her marriage, frequently was called to take care of Mrs. Carlson. At times she remained *233 as long as six or seven weeks at a time. Mrs. Carlson died February 6, 1928. In the meantime, Marie and her husband were living in Waterloo, where, at the time of the trial, they still lived.

It clearly appears that Marie worked very faithfully and very hard for the appellee and his wife. It.also appears that not only before the death of his wife, but afterwards, appellee relied to a large extent upon Marie. When his wife died he immediately called Marie. As the appellee testified: “She was the only one I had.” Shortly after the death of his wife, appellee decided he wanted to make a trip to his native land, Sweden, and again he called Marie, asking her .to come to pack his trunk and help him get ready to make the trip. This included doing his washing and mending, buying shirts, clothing, and other material for him, and in general getting him ready for the trip. It seems he lived alone and had not disposed of any of his wife’s wardrobe. This he had concluded to take with him to Sweden and give to some of his relatives there. He wished Marie to come to pack these goods and prepare him for the trip. She arrived in Boone the day before Decoration Day, May 29th, and remained until June 9th.

The appellee left for Sweden on June 13th. What happened at Boone between the appellee and appellant during the time intervening between May 29th and June 9th is in dispute.

On Decoration Day the appellee and appellant visited the cemetery at Boone together. Begarding that day’s occurrences the appellee testified in part as follows:

“As we were down there she began to tails; about it, she says, now you are going to take a dangerous trip, you have to do something, you better do something, she said, and so I said, what, I didn’t know about anything, I thought everything was all right. No, you got to do something. And she wouldn’t leave me alone, she was after me that whole evening. * * * She says, ‘You got to do something.’ ‘You got to get something done.’ She says. ‘Before you go.’ She says, ‘If you don’t you are liable to have some trouble,’ and so she says, ‘I am the nearest to you’ — I don’t know how you are, I have a brother and a sister. But she said she would be so true to me as anything could be, and so she said if I would deed it to her, she didn’t *234 say deed, she said if I would do something, some writing to her when I come back I could come and live with her .or have them papers back and she just got me too excited, you know, I had my sorrow after my wife died, and I was just worked up, I didn’t hardly know what I was doing. * :S * Q. Mr. Carlson, you may tell the Court what she said, if anything, to you in reference to if you got back from Sweden, what she would do in reference to this property? A. She would give it right back to me. * * * She said it that night and she said it before we got the papers. * i:= We talked it over the day before and the day before that and then I talked it over with my lawyer myself before she went-along. * * * Q. What did she say? A. You are in danger every minute. Q. Is that what' she told you? A. Yes, you are in danger every minute. * * * She wanted it done because she thought that somebody would sue me to get my property, I guess, and she thought she would protect me. * * * Q. What did she say in those conversations what she would do in case you got back from Sweden all right? A. Then she would turn it back. She would never have got it if it hadn’t been for that. * * * Q. State whether or not you had confidence in what she would promise to do? A. I had all of the confidence I could have. I couldn’t have had any more. Q. At that time did you state — state whether or not at that time you believed she would do what she said she would do? A. Sure. Q. Deed this property back to you when you got back from Sweden? A. I sure did.”

Referring to the execution and delivery of the deed at the office of the attorney who drew the same, the appellee testified:

“Q. Well, what was done there, go on and tell just what was done then? A. It was this way, that we come up there to have it done and she agreed to hand it back when I come back from Sweden and I don’t know anything more. Q. And was that talked over in the lawyer’s office? A. It was talked over in the lawyer’s office. * * * Q. Yes, you answer my question I asked you what you done after you signed this deed and after Mr. Dyer put his seal on it? A. He held it in his hand like this (indicating) and she was sitting right about' there and he says, ‘When he comes back from Sweden you hand that back to him, will you?’ And she says,‘Yes.’ And after she said yes he *235 let her have it. After Mr. Dyer handed the deed to Mrs. Smith we left the office. I think we went home. ’ ’

Mr. Dyer, who drew the deed, testified:

“The conversation before the deed was drawn had.to do with the — I supposed that a deed was what they wanted, I didn’t know, and I got the description, I think in the first instance from some tax receipts Mr. Carlson had, but I believe I checked them later with the abstracter’s books, I mean just by phoning, of the Boone County Abstract Company, that is the best description that I could get, then I went out to the outer room and prepared this deed and when I came in I read it over to them and began checking the description and said, is that the way it is to be and I was answered in the affirmative from somebody. I don’t know who it was, and so I took it and just before I handed it to Mrs. Smith I said, ‘It is your understanding that if Mr. Carlson gets back from Sweden all right you are to turn this back to him?’ And she said, ‘Yes.’ And Mr. Carlson also said, ‘Now you remember that, don’t you Marie?’ And she said, ‘Yes, I remember it.’ I remember that very distinctly. Q. Prior to that time do you remember, Mr. Dyer, whether there had been any talk in reference to the same matter of the property being conveyed back to Mr. Carlson in case he came back safely from Sweden? A. Yes, there had before I even prepared the deed. Q.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Davidson v. Van Lengen
266 N.W.2d 436 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1978)
Anthony v. Anthony
204 N.W.2d 829 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1973)
Sisson v. Janssen
56 N.W.2d 30 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1952)
England v. England
51 N.W.2d 437 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1952)
Speights v. Deon
182 S.W.2d 1016 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1944)
Rance v. Gaddis
284 N.W. 468 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
Eliason v. Stephens
246 N.W. 771 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 N.W. 387, 213 Iowa 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlson-v-smith-iowa-1931.