Fowler v. Lowe

42 N.W.2d 516, 241 Iowa 1093, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 456
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 5, 1950
Docket47592
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 42 N.W.2d 516 (Fowler v. Lowe) 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
Fowler v. Lowe, 42 N.W.2d 516, 241 Iowa 1093, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 456 (iowa 1950).

Opinion

Mulronev, J.

The plaintiff was a foundling from some New York institution, who was taken into the home of John and Margaret Sullivan in Williams, Iowa, in 1889. She was four years old at the time and about two years later Margaret Sullivan died. Thereafter J ohn Sullivan maintained the plaintiff in homes in the vicinity of Williams, and in a boarding school in Fort Dodge until 1895 when John Sullivan married Anna Cassidy. Thereafter plaintiff lived in the farm home of John and Anna Sullivan until her marriage to Hugh Fowler in 1909. After her marriage she and her husband lived part of the time in the Sullivan home, and the rest of the time on a farm near the Sullivan home, until May 28,1938, when John Sullivan died intestate at the age of ninety-five. Anna Sullivan died testate in January of 1948. John Sullivan left a small amount of personal property and a farm of 251 acres, and the will of Anna Sullivan provided for a few specific bequests — none of them in favor of plaintiff — and the residue to St. Thomas Catholic school in Webster City.

On May 7, 1948, plaintiff filed her suit against the executor and legatees of Anna Sullivan’s estate claiming she was entitled to a two-thirds interest in the 251-acre farm since the death of John Sullivan, because she was the adopted daughter of John Sullivan, and entitled to the other one-third interest in said farm since the death of Amia Sullivan because she was the adopted daughter of Anna Sullivan. The petition did not allege a legal adoption by the Sullivans, but did allege facts and a filial relationship, which the petition alleged estopped those claiming through the Sullivans from denying to plaintiff the rights and status of an adopted child of the Sullivans.

The defendants, the executor and residuary legatee of Anna Sullivan’s estate, answered denying that they were estopped to *1096 show that plaintiff was not adopted by John and Anna Sullivan and they further alleged that John Sullivan had deeded the farm in question to his wife and she had died testate leaving no part of her property to plaintiff.

In plaintiff’s reply she alleged the deed referred to in defendants’ answer “was never known to or considered by Anna Sullivan as a valid deed, but instead Anna Sullivan as adminis-tratrix of the estate of John Sullivan administered the real estate referred to therein as a part of the property of said John Sullivan.”

Some thirty witnesses testified in behalf of plaintiff, telling the story of the home life of the Sullivans (John and Anna) and the position of plaintiff in that household. The defendants’ testimony consisted mainly of the deed and the estate proceedings of Anna Sullivan. At the conclusion of the testimony the trial court held: (1) The evidence was sufficient to establish an estop-pel against defendants from asserting that plaintiff was not adopted by John Sullivan (2) the evidence was insufficient to establish an estoppel against the defendants from asserting that plaintiff was not adopted by Anna Sullivan (3) the evidence established the existence of an agreement “whereby John Sullivan was to leave plaintiff such a share of his property as a natural child would inherit if he had one”, and (4) the deed being without consideration was in fraud of said agreement. Based on this finding the trial court decreed a two-thirds interest in the farm in plaintiff. The defendants appeal from this decree and plaintiff cross-appealed from that portion of the decree which failed to give her the other one-third interest in the farm.

While there are many divisions' in the six briefs, it can be stated generally that the questions presented on defendants’ appeal are:. (1) Was the evidence sufficient to establish an agreement whereby John Sullivan was to leave the plaintiff a child’s share of his property — in other words a contract of inheritance? (2) Was the deed valid? (3) Was the evidence sufficient to establish an estoppel against the defendants from asserting that plaintiff was not adopted by John Sullivan?

I. No contract of inheritance whereby John Sullivan agreed to leave plaintiff any property was alleged in plaintiff’s petition. The only agreement alleged in the petition is that the “Sullivans *1097 agreed to- adopt the said plaintiff-and to permit her to inherit their property.”

No contract to inherit is implied from an agreement to adopt. As stated in Page on Wills, Lifetime Ed., section 1724: “A contract to adopt a child does not imply a covenant to devise property to it.” See also Brown v. Blesch, 270 Mich. 576, 259 N.W. 331, and annotation 97 A. L. R. 1015. The pleading of an agreement to permit inheritance is hardly a pleading of a contract of inheritance. Nor was the proof sufficient to establish an agreement by John Sullivan to leave his property to plaintiff. We have held the proof to establish a parol contract of inheritance must be “clear, satisfactory and convincing.” Sharpe v. Wilson, 181 Iowa 753, 161 N.W. 35; Stiles v. Breed, 151 Iowa 86, 130 N.W. 376.

The few statements of John Sullivan, testified to by witnesses, wherein John Sullivan expressed an intention to leave his property to plaintiff, or that she would inherit his property, are no more than expressions of donative intent. They do not tend to establish that John Sullivan had made a contract that would prevent him from doing what he liked with his property. One cannot find in such testimony a contract which would deprive him of the right to dispose of his property as he saw fit. In re Estate of Rich, 199 Iowa 902, 200 N.W. 713; Boeck v. Milke, 141 Iowa 713, 718, 118 N.W. 874, 876; Steele v. Steele, 161 Mo. 566, 576, 61 S.W. 815, 818. Of similar expressions in Boeck v. Milke, supra, we said they showed “an intention, on the part of [deceased], to give his property to plaintiff, and they lend little countenance to the idea that he had already made such a definite and specific contract to do so as to prevent his changing his mind ® In Steele v. Steele, supra, such statements were held to be “nothing more than the expression of an expectation.”

We hold that the trial court’s finding that an agreement existed whereby John Sullivan was to leave a child’s portion of his property to plaintiff cannot be supported by plaintiff’s pleading or proof.

II. Plaintiff’s pleading is also insufficient with respect to presenting a challenge to the validity of the deed. At the time the deed was introduced, plaintiff’s only objection was *1098 “that tbe record affirmatively shows the decedent, Anna Sullivan, abandoned all claim to the real estate described therein and abandoned the said deed'referred to f * * by reason of her conduct in the estate of John Sullivan deceased.” The deed was introduced in evidence and the original deed has been certified to this court. It is perfectly obvious that the date in the body of the deed and in the acknowledgment has been changed. The original dates, August 7, 1938, have been changed in each instance to August 7, 1936, by writing over the numeral 8 in 1938 the numeral 6. The grantee’s name is spelled Annia Sullivan and along the margin of the deed is the notation “hold in escrow.”

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.W.2d 516, 241 Iowa 1093, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-lowe-iowa-1950.