Copple v. Morrison

264 N.W. 113, 221 Iowa 183
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
DocketNo. 42918.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 264 N.W. 113 (Copple v. Morrison) 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
Copple v. Morrison, 264 N.W. 113, 221 Iowa 183 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Anderson, J.

This is an action involving a claim filed in the estate of John A. Heteriek, deceased, for money paid on a real estate contract; the contract having been entered into between C. L. and Rose Copple, claimants-appellants, and a guardian of the deceased, John A. Heteriek. At the time the contract for the sale of the real estate was made, the title thereto was held by John A. Heteriek in trust for himself and others. The claim was not filed against the estate of John A. Heteriek, deceased, until more than a year after the appointment of an executor and the publication of the notice of such appointment. The claimants claim equitable reasons why the claim was not filed within the statutory period, and why they should be entitled to file and prove the same after such period. Such reasons are claimed to be that the claimants had no knowledge of the situation or condition of the title or legality of their contract for the purchase of the land in question until after the expiration of the year within which claims should be filed. The. defenses to the claim and petition of the claimants were a general denial; that it was not filed within time and was barred by the statute of limitations; that it was not a proper claim against the John A. Heteriek estate, and was never a liability either of the deceased or of his estate. There ivas a trial to the court resulting in a denial of plaintiffs’ claim and their right to file the same against the John A. Heteriek estate. The claimants appeal. '

*185 The facts as disclosed by the record are not in serious dispute. John A. Heterick obtained a deed to the real estate in question and on the same day that he received such deed executed an article of trust in which it was provided that he took and held the title as trustee only, and for the following purposes: first, to pay liens and claims against the real estate; second, to pay claims of the First National Bank of Logan, Iowa, against the grantor; third, any balance remaining as the proceeds of said real estate to be the property of C. N. "Wood, and the trustee, John A. Heterick. Later Heterick became mentally incompetent. An application for the appointment of a guardian for his property was filed in the district court of Harrison county, Iowa, and pursuant to said application one C. N. Wood was appointed as such guardian on the 8th day of September, 1930; Wood qualified as such guardian and continued to act until the death of John A. Heterick, which occurred about September 1, 1931. ‘The final report of the guardian 'was filed on October 2, 1931, and the guardianship closed. On October 30, 1933, an application was filed by the beneficiaries of the John A. Heterick estate and the eestuis que trustent under the article of trust, asking that said guardianship proceedings be reopened, and under such application the proceedings were reopened, and C. N. Wood was reappointed guardian .under the order of court, and qualified as such. On October 30, 1933, C. N. Wood was appointed trustee of the real estate involved to succeed Heterick, and both of said appointments, that is, O. N. Wood as guardian, and O. N. Wood as successor trustee, seems to have been continued up to the time of the trial of this case. An application was made by the guardian to sell the trust real estate in September, 1930. Notice of the pendency of such application was served on the ward, John A. Heterick, in a foreign state; pursuant to such application and notice the court on December 4, 1930, made an order approving the sale of the real estate in question, and the contract was entered into between C. N. Wood, guardian, and the claimants, C. L. and Rose Copple. The contract of sale was actually signed and executed on the 19th day of September, 1930. Under this contract the claimants entered into the possession of the real estate and paid to the guardian thereon the sum of $3,225.75. On the 28th day of September, 1932, the claimants had prepared and served upon the executor of John A. Heterick estate, upon C. N. Wood, guardian, and *186 upon the eestuis que trustent under the article of trust, and at least upon some of the heirs of John A. Heterick, deceased, a notice of rescission of the contract for the sale of the real estate in question. The notice of rescission recites that the appellants Copple had entered into the contract for the purchase of the real estate involved, agreeing to pay therefor the sum of $18,290, and that they had paid thereon the sum of $3,000 together with some interest; that they went into possession of the real estate on the 1st of March, 1931, and still retained the possession thereof; that the guardian had no authority from the court to make and enter into the contract for the sale of said real estate; and that the application for the sale of said real estate and the order approving the same was entered after the date of said contract, and on the 14th day of December, 1930; and further that John A. Heterick did not own the real estate in question at the time of the making of the contract for the sale thereof by his guardian; and that his guardian in any event would not succeed to the title of the trust property and had no authority to contract to sell and convey the same. The notice contained the further statement that on account of the condition of "the title of the premises involved and the inadequacy of the proceedings in court approving the said contract and the inability of the guardian as vendor to perform the conditions of the said contract, the grantees, Copples, elect to rescind, cancel, and terminate the said contract. The claimants, grantees, make in said notice a tender of all their right, title, and interest in the premises and offer to surrender the possession thereof, and demand the return of the $3,000 paid upon the contract. They offer, however, in the said notice to allow a credit upon the. amount paid by them in the sum of $600 for each year they had been in possession of the real estate, for the use of the same. At that time they had been in possession of the real estate three years, but at the time of the trial of this action they were still in possession and have been in possession at least four and possibly five years.

On the same date that the foregoing notice of rescission was served, the claimants filed their claim against the estate of John A. Heterick and served notice upon J. W. Morrison, the executor thereof, of the filing thereof, and later filed amendments to their claim in which they recite that the district court of Harrison county, Iowa, had no jurisdiction to appoint a guardian *187 of the property of John A. Heterick for the reason that at the time of such appointment Heterick was not an inhabitant of the state of Iowa, and was not served with the notice of the pendency of the petition for the appointment of guardian in a manner required by law; and that by reason thereof the appointment of the guardian was a nullity, and all proceedings had under such appointment including the making of said contract with the claimants were without jurisdiction and null and void.

The issues, both as to the allowance of the claim and the issues raised by the petition in equity permitting the filing of the claim after the expiration of the statutory period, were tried and submitted to the court as one case, and the court found that the claim was not a valid claim against the estate; that no equitable reasons appear for relieving the claimants from the bar of the statute; and that the claim should be dismissed. From this order the claimants have appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
264 N.W. 113, 221 Iowa 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copple-v-morrison-iowa-1935.