Dallas Real Estate Co. v. Groves

289 N.W. 900, 228 Iowa 1232
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 14, 1940
DocketNo. 45062.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 289 N.W. 900 (Dallas Real Estate Co. v. Groves) 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
Dallas Real Estate Co. v. Groves, 289 N.W. 900, 228 Iowa 1232 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

The Dallas Real Estate Company, a corporation, and W. H. Brenton as plaintiffs commenced this action *1234 against C. H. Groves and P. C. Holdoegel on three certain promissory notes, signed by C. H. Groves and endorsed by P. C. Holdoegel. The petition asks judgment in the amount of $39,388.78 plus interest and costs. C. H. Groves filed a separate answer in which he pleads as a defense, th-at the notes sued upon had been fully compromised and settled and receipt showing full payment issued by the plaintiffs to the said C. H. Groves. The plaintiffs by way of reply allege that the settlement was procured by fraud. C. H. Groves filed a motion for a separate trial which was sustained. Plaintiffs then filed a motion to transfer the issue of fraud" to the equity side of the calendar, which motion the court sustained. The case then proceeded to trial on the equity issue, as against the defendant C. II. Groves alone, P. C. Holdoegel not being involved in said trial nor in this appeal.

There was a trial, at which a large number of witnesses testified and a great volume of testimony was taken. The lower court found that the settlement was obtained without fraud, misrepresentation, or concealment by C. H. Groves, and that the compromise pleaded by him was a complete settlement of plaintiffs’ cause.

The plaintiffs being dissatisfied with the holding have appealed to this court.

This cause of action grew out of the “land boom” days of 1919 and 1920. That period in the history of Iowa when land was selling at $250 to $400 per acre. It was followed a few years later by what is now known as the depression years, when the sale prices of the same land that sold at the boom prices dropped to a small fraction of its former price. The bottom of that depression was reached in 1932. In the consideration of this case there must be kept in mind the difference in value of land between what men of experience and training believed farm land to be worth in 1919 and 1920 and the years 1930, 1931, and 1932.

In June of 1919, C. H. Groves together with P. C. Holdoegel and J. H. Bradt (now deceased) purchased from Catherine *1235 Bradford and her husband, S. C. Bradford, a 651-acre farm in Buena Yista county, Iowa, known as the “Grass Lake Ranch”, for a consideration of $162,750.

They paid a little over $8,000 at the execution of the contract, and a little over $24,000 on March 1, 1920, the day the deed was delivered. In addition they assumed a first mortgage of $62,000 and executed a second mortgage to Catherine Bradford on this farm for the balance in the sum of approximately $68,200.

Shortly thereafter, Groves, Holdoegel, and Bradt sold the Grass Lake Ranch to a T. J. Caskey at a supposed profit which was represented by a third mortgage in the sum of $13,757. Caskey assumed and agreed to pay the first and second mortgages on the farm. Caskey sold the farm to Erma Eriehsen and Amelia Braasch, who assumed and agreed to pay the first, second, and third mortgages.

These last purchasers were unable to keep up the taxes on the farm and the interest on the three mortgages and in June 1925 deeded the farm back to Groves, Holdoegel, and Bradt in settlement of the third mortgage which was believed to have been profit at the time of the sale of the farm by Groves et al., to Caskey.

Groves, Holdoegel, and Bradt held the farm for a few years reducing the first mortgage from $62,000 to $50,000 and the second mortgage from $68,200 to $58,157 and in addition put several thousand dollars worth of improvements upon the farm.

In 1922 Catherine Bradford and her husband became quite heavily involved financially with the Brentons, who are bankers at Dallas Center and who are the main owners of the Dallas Real Estate Company. The Bradfords transferred and assigned considerable property to the Brentons, including the second mortgage on the Grass Lake Ranch, in settlement of their obligations.

In 1926 the second mortgage on the Grass Lake Ranch was renewed by executing nine promissory notes, three of *1236 them the notes involved in this case, were signed by C. H. Groves as maker and endorsed by Holdoegel and Bradt, three others were signed by Bradt as maker and endorsed by Holdoegel and Groves, and three were signed by Holdoegel as maker and endorsed by Bradt and Groves. The total amount was $58,157.88. These notes were given to W. H. Brenton, and were secured by a second mortgage on the Grass Lake Baneh. This mortgage was subject to the first mortgage, which was originally $62,000, but had been reduced to about $50,000.

In 1932 W. H. Brenton assigned all nine of the notes to the Brenton Real Estate Company. It is conceded that the Brenton Bealty Company, Brenton Beal Estate Company, Dallas Real Estate Company, and W. H. Brenton are one and the same thing.

In the operation of these various companies, the Brentons who were the real owners, employed one D. E. Neville. It is conceded that he had authority to do everything he did in this case.

Conditions in Iowa grew gradually worse. It was impossible out of. the income on the farm to pay the interest on these two large mortgages and the taxes, and in 1931, Groves and Holdoegel (Bradt having died) entered into a written agreement, called in the record “Agreement for the appointment of a receiver”, for the Grass Lake Banch. The agreement was with W. H. Brenton, and it provided that D. E. Neville was to be the receiver, to rent, operate, and collect the income from the farm.

The agreement sets out that there is a first mortgage of $50,000 on the land, that it was to run for a period of one year, and that suit on the notes or foreclosure of the mortgage held by Brenton was not to be commenced for a period of one year. Neville acted as receiver for a period of three years, and during that time collected the rents and income, paid the first half of the 1931 taxes, and turned over to Brenton the rest of the money collected, the amount not being shown.

In March of 1932, Neville wrote Groves a letter in which he said that the matter should be “cleaned up”.

*1237 We quote from the letter:

“In figuring over the. deal with the amount due on your notes, together with interest, Í believe that if you could arrange to put up $25,000 in cash or securities, we would be willing to make a final settlement on the basis of that amount. Of course, this amount would be .less your share of the income we have received from the farm and your share of the Erichsen chattel mortgage which would be deducted.”

Groves replied that he would be glad to cooperate “if some adjustment could be reached within my ability”.' '

Neville' also wrote to Holdoegel about a settlement. Holdoegel did not reply. Groves then saw Holdoegel .and - wrote Neville. We quote from his letter:

“Mr. Holdoegel said he had received your letter, but the reason of delay in answering it was the..fact that your figures ‘knocked him off the Xmas tree’ and that he saw but little use in answering.”

Mr. Neville had according to his testimony several talks with Groves in Cherokee.

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Bluebook (online)
289 N.W. 900, 228 Iowa 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-real-estate-co-v-groves-iowa-1940.