Charles v. Hart

191 Iowa 418
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 191 Iowa 418 (Charles v. Hart) 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
Charles v. Hart, 191 Iowa 418 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

I. A statement of the family relationship of the parties and persons whose names figure in this controversy will aid in the clear understanding of the facts of the case. About the year 1885, one Olive P. Hart became the wife of Forest Noble. By a former marriage, Mrs. Noble had several children, among whom was the defendant herein, Jacob A. Hart (spoken of in the record as Dade Hart). About the year 1915, Olive P. (Hart) Noble died testate, dividing her entire estate in equal shares to her husband, Forest Noble, and her son Jacob. This will was admitted to probate. In October, 1918, Forest Noble, who was in the railway service, was accidentally killed, leaving neither wife nor .living issue. He left a will, bearing date of February 25, 1915, which was admitted to probate. By the terms of this will he gave his entire estate in equal shares to his stepson, Jacob A. Hart, and Josephine, wife of Jacob. At the same time and place, and apparently as a part of the same transaction, Jacob A. Hart also executed a will in like form, giving his entire estate in equal shares to Josephine, his wife, and to his stepfather, Forest Noble. These instruments were executed at the same time, witnessed by the same persons, and deposited together in a bank safety box, to which both testators had access. On opening the safety box, after Noble’s death, there were found therein, with the will, written notes or memo-randa, as follows:

Exhibit 1.
“Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Sept. 18. Dada: If anything happens to me, give the Chalmers to Bob Smith after you are through using it here. F. A. Noble.”
Exhibit 3.
“Aug. 3rd. To My Legal Representative, Dade Hart: Pay out of my insurance
“To Maude Charles Bunger .$500.00
“To Martha Roy Charles ■. 500.00
“To Marie Hancock, my niece. 500.00
“To Josephine Hart, stepdaughter . 500.00
[420]*420“All other moneys I may have, go to Dade Hart.
“Forest A. Noble.”
Exhibit 4.
“Sept. 18. Dear Dada: If-1 should get killed by accident there will be life insurance to about $6,000. If it should happen please give Mrs. Charles One Thousand in addition to my One Thousand I have set aside for her out of my O. R. C. insurance.
“Forest.
“P. S. There will be something coming to you from the Railroad.
‘ ‘ Forest. ’ ’

The plaintiff, Eva Charles, is the sister of Forest Noble, deceased.

Returning now to the origin and nature of the claim asserted by the plaintiff, it appears that she became a widow a short time prior to the death of the wife of her brother Forest, and, at the time of the decease of her sister-in-law, she was in Cedar Rapids, upon some business errand connected with the estate of her late husband. Pursuant to some agreement or understanding between the brother and sister, the latter thereafter made her home in a house on a part of the real estate devised by Olive P. Noble to her husband, Forest, and her son Jacob. This house, as we understand the record, had been the home of Olive in her lifetime, and the furniture and household equipment were such as she left therein. It should be said that both Forest Noble and his stepson were railroad men, and, for a considerable portion of the time, they were employed on roads in a distant state, and their actual presence in Cedar Rapids was not constant. During the remainder of the life of Forest, his sister lived in his house and kept and cared for his home, a period of perhaps three years. In his vacation from active employment, Noble returned home, where he and his sister lived together. The relations between brother and sister appear to have been harmonious. After Noble’s death, Hart, as executor of his will, went to Noble’s late home and made an inventory of his estate, listing therein the undivided half of substantially all of the property now in controversy. The plaintiff was present, and at that time asserted no claim of right or title [421]*421to snob property or estate. At about tbe same time, Hart suggested to plaintiff that the house was sufficient to afford room both for herself and for Hart and his wife, but plaintiff refused to accede to such arrangement. Soon afterward, she asserted a claim of ownership to all the estate, real and personal, of which Forest Noble died seized or possessed, on the alleged ground that she entered the home of her brother under an oral contract, by which, in consideration of her taking charge of and keeping his home, he would keep and care for her during her life; and that, to insure the performance of such agreement on his part, in the event that she outlived him, he promised to make a will, giving her all his property of every kind. It is to enforce this alleged contract and confirm her title to said estate that this suit has been instituted. It should, perhaps, be said that the plaintiff first filed a claim against the estate of her brother for $25,000 damages because of the failure of the deceased to perform the alleged contract; but, by agreement of the parties, the proceedings were transferred to the equity calendar for trial on pleadings thereafter framed. Proper objections were made to the competency of witnesses; but, following the prevailing practice, the answers of such witnesses were taken and preserved in the record, subject to the court’s final ruling when the testimony was all in.

We cannot undertake any review of the evidence in detail. When we eliminate from our consideration, as we must, the testimony of the plaintiff as a witness to alleged personal dealings, communications, and transactions between herself and her brother, the case made by her does not appeal strongly to one’s confidence. The corroboration on which she relies is, for the most part, supplied by her children and interested relatives, who repeat alleged statements or admissions by Forest Noble in his lifetime. While such testimony is, for the most part, competent, it is still to be said that evidence from interested or biased sources, of statements and admissions by one whose mouth is closed by death, is to be scanned with caution, and ordinarily lacks persuasive force, unless the alleged admissions are consistent with the proved attitude and conduct of the deceased in his lifetime. Now, in so far as we have any aid to be derived from Forest Noble’s own undisputed words and acts, [422]*422they tend to discredit the plaintiff’s claim. So far as appears, there is nothing in the record to suggest the thought that he sought to mislead or deceive his sister, or that, while encouraging her to understand that she was to be the beneficiary of his entire estate, he was perfecting a plan to deprive her of it. All, or substantially all, of the property he possessed was such as he had derived from his deceased wife, the mother of Hart, and it was not an unnatural or discreditable thought on his part to provide that, on his death, the bulk of it should go back to her son. His will to that effect had been duly executed, was carefully preserved until his death, and not only was never revoked, but its existence was, from time to time, impliedly recognized by him in the written memoranda directed to his executor and deposited with the will.

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Bluebook (online)
191 Iowa 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-v-hart-iowa-1921.