Charlson v. Brunsvold

89 N.W.2d 344, 249 Iowa 775, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 9, 1958
Docket49372
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 N.W.2d 344 (Charlson v. Brunsvold) 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
Charlson v. Brunsvold, 89 N.W.2d 344, 249 Iowa 775, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 452 (iowa 1958).

Opinion

Oliver, J.-

This is an action at law by Sadie Charlson, guardian of the property of her adoptive mother, Gurine Dahl-seide, to recover the amount of a gift of $2520 made June 3,1955, by Mrs. Dahlseide to defendant, Theodore E. Brunsvold, on the ground the donor was mentally incompetent to make it. Defendant is a brother to Mrs. Dahlseide. She was then eighty-five years of age. For many years she had lived with her husband and adopted daughter, Sadie, on a 160-acre farm in Worth County. They had no natural children. Sadie married Sherman Charlson and they lived on the farm with the Dahlseides. The Charlsons have five children. Mr. Dahlseide died in 1943. Under his will Mrs. Dahlseide received a life estate in the farm, remainder to Sadie Charlson. Since 1940 Sadie and her husband had handled the farm as tenants and the Dahlseides had lived with them. After Mr. Dahlseide’s death Mrs. Dahlseide continued this arrangement and Sadie cared for her, wrote and signed all her checks and, with Mr. Charlson, handled her business affairs.

Mrs. Dahlseide suffered a heart attack and was ill for several months beginning with December 1954 or January 1955. She was attended by Dr. Richard W. Hill. Her sister, Mrs. Eschrieh, who resided in South Dakota, visited the Charlson home from March to May 30, 1955. Mrs. Eschrieh asked to see Mrs. Dahl-seide’s papers and securities. Mrs. Charlson secured them from the family safe and handed them to Mrs. Eschrieh. They consisted of a certificate of deposit for about $6000 belonging to Mrs. Dahlseide and about $5000 in bonds, registered in the name of Mrs. Dahlseide or Sadie Charlson, as joint owners. Mrs. Dahl-seide had no other personal property. Sadie Charlson testified *777 Mrs. Eschrich did not return the securities to her. Mrs. Eschrich had previously made inquiry relative to the adoption papers of Sadie Charlson which would prove Sadie to be Mrs. Dahlseide’s sole heir-at-law.

After Mrs. Eschrich obtained possession of the securities defendant called at the Charlson home for Mrs. Dahlseide and he and Mrs. Eschrich took her to defendant’s home. Apparently she had not been away from the Charlson home for some time. Someone had arranged for the presence at defendant’s home, of Earl Granskow, the cashier of the bank at Joice which had issued the certificate of deposit and in which Mrs. Dahlseide had a small checking account. Mr. Granskow testified defendant, Brunsvold, Mrs. Eschrich and Mrs. Dahlseide sat in a room together and discussed the division of Mrs. Dahlseide’s money. Mrs. Dahlseide asked Mr. Granskow to draw a will for her. He understood he had been invited to the meeting for that purpose. However, he did not do this.

The transaction here in question was consummated June 3, 1955. Mrs. Charlson testified that at the time her mother was physically weak and shaky and “was very forgetful. She repeated things many times a day, probably start in the morning and keep on the same subject many times a day. Different people came and they were probably outside visiting with my husband, Sherman, and he would tell who was there and she would ask maybe five or six times who was out there.” Mrs. Eschrich had been called back to South Dakota by the imminent death of her sick husband and did not participate personally in the June 3 transaction.

On that date defendant and his wife called at the Charlson home for Mrs. Dahlseide and took her to the bank at Joice. They went to the directors’ room and there discussed the disposition of Mrs. Dahlseide’s money. Mr. Granskow testified the Charlsons had been taking care of her business and had signed the necessary checks for her and she had not signed a check for years. He cashed the $6000 time certificate and six bonds for her and deposited to her account $7780.90, thus secured. He also prepared three checks, each for $2520, payable to defendant, to Mrs. Eschrich and to G. E. Brunsvold (another brother) respectively. Mrs. Dahlseide signed the checks and they were handed to de *778 fendant. Defendant cashed the cheek made payable to him. Mrs. Dahlseide’s shaky signature on that check misspelled her name as Dahlsed.

Mrs. Charlson testified: “On the third Sunday in June, 1955, my mother wanted to know where her bonds were and, after talking with my mother, my husband went to the bank at Joiee to find out what had happened to her money.” After Mrs. Dahlseide “found out her money was all gone, she got worse and worse, and it was money, money, money, all day long, that’s all I heard. She’d sit and she’d pound upstairs, you could hear her, she’d pound like that, she was just aggravated to think that anything like that could happen.” Mrs. Dahlseide was taken to see defendant. She asked him to return her money “because she said that wasn’t the way she wanted it. * * * She wanted to give it to the missions and she had grandchildren to give it to * # Defendant testified: “I told her I would see about it.” Upon Mrs. Dahlseide’s application Sadie was appointed guardian of her property. Mrs. Dahlseide’s two signatures on the application were misspelled, Dahalsied and Dahlside.

July 21, 1955, Mrs. Dahlseide was placed in a nursing home and has since been kept there. The nurse who operated the home testified her condition at the time of the trial, February 1957, was the same as when she was brought to the home: “She was what I would call senile and at times very forgetful. She would ask the same thing one day and the next day repeatedly ask it again. * * * she doesn’t recall when people have been in the home to see her. * * # Mrs. Charlson visited her mother several times. * * * She wouldn’t remember that she had been in. She eats at the breakfast table and she is not what I would call alert. * * * She helps dress herself. She is able to take care of herself personally to a certain extent and she is up and around.” She regularly took medicine prescribed by a doctor, for people who are mentally (affected) to make them quiet, to like themselves better and to be of a better nature and easier to handle.

The defense presented the testimony of three witnesses. C. J. Brunsvold, a nephew of Mrs. Dahlseide who lived on a near-by farm, testified she wanted him to help her make a will and he did not think he should do it because he “thought there maybe would be friction. She wanted to give five hundred dollars to each of *779 the three sisters of Martin, a thousand dollars to the church and the rest of it to Theodore, G. E. Brunsvold and Mrs. Eschrich. ■::< * * She knew she had about six thousand dollars on deposit in the bank and she had some bonds, but I don’t think she knew exactly how much she had. * * * After March 1955 * * * she kept on with that all the time and I got awful tired with it. After June 8, 1955, she said she had given away her money and she was through with it. * * * she seemed to understand what she was talking about * * * what she wanted to do with her property. She wanted to give it away. She seemed to be the same as she used to be except she was ill. She said she was mad at the two Charlsons. When I observed her I would say that she was normal.”

Defendant testified: “Prior to June 3, 1955, Mrs. Dahlseide told me that she wanted to give away her property. * * * She said she was going to give some to Martin Dahlseide’s sisters and was going to give some to the church and then she was going to divide out among us brothers and sisters.

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89 N.W.2d 344, 249 Iowa 775, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charlson-v-brunsvold-iowa-1958.