Goodale v. Murray

289 N.W. 450, 227 Iowa 843
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 9, 1940
DocketNo. 44728.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 289 N.W. 450 (Goodale v. Murray) 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
Goodale v. Murray, 289 N.W. 450, 227 Iowa 843 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

The proceeding was commenced by plaintiff filing her petition in equity to establish and probate the lost will of Henry Dieckman, deceased. George C. Murray, sheriff of Chickasaw county, had been appointed administrator of the estate of the deceased. The deceased had never married, so far as known, and left no known heirs. For that reason Frank Yaala, the tenant on the land, Chickasaw County, the State of Iowa, the unknown heirs of the deceased, and the unknown claimants to the land, consisting of about 170 acres, of which the decedent died seized, were all made defendants in the action. The deceased also left personal property of about the value of $900. Plaintiff alleged that Dieckman died testate, on May 16, 1937, having executed his last will about the year 1920, by the terms of which he had bequeathed and devised all of his property to the plaintiff, but that said will was lost and could not be found, and that he had not revoked said will, nor made a later one. On motion of the defendants, the cause *846 was transferred, to tbe probate side of tbe calendar. On motion of tbe defendants, a part of tbe prayer of tbe petition, stating tbat tbe defendants bad no interest in tbe estate, and tbat plaintiff as sole devisee was entitled to all of it, and tbat title to tbe real estate be quieted in tbe plaintiff, and asking general equitable relief, was stricken. Thereafter plaintiff amended tbe prayer of ber petition, by adding: “Tbat said will be ordered filed for probate and notice of probate thereof given and tbat tbe same be admitted to probate as tbe last will and testament of Henry Dieekman, Deceased. ’ ’ All defendants then refiled their answers, which were general denials, on tbe probate side of tbe calendar.

Before tbe introduction of any testimony, Mr. Bookin, attorney for tbe State of Iowa, made tbe following objection:

‘ ‘ Comes now tbe defendant, State of Iowa, and tbe defendant Goerge C. Murray, as Administrator of tbe Estate of Henry Dieekman, deceased, by John H. Mitchell, Charles Bookin and Charles Wilson, attorneys for tbe State of Iowa, and Cronin & Kennedy, attorneys for George C. Murray and Chickasaw County, Iowa, and object to tbe jurisdiction of this court to proceed at this time in an attempt to establish tbe contents of tbe will for tbe reason tbat said matter is properly triable to a jury, and contend, and each of them request tbat tbe matter of tbe contents and all other matters germane to tbe establishment of tbe lost will be submitted to a jury, instead of to tbe court.”

Tbe objection was overruled and tbe defendants excepted. Tbe appellant’s assignment of error thereon will be' hereinafter referred to.

Tbe record discloses, without evidence to tbe contrary, tbat Dieekman was a native of Germany, who came to Chickasaw county about 45 years before bis death. He was a stonemason by trade. When be first came to tbe United States and to Chickasaw county, be worked at tbe farm home of Matt Doyle, tbe father of tbe plaintiff. He built foundations for tbe farm buildings, and helped in making other improvements. Doyle befriended him in various ways. One witness, who knew Dieck-man for nearly 40 years, and who bad employed him, testified tbat Dieekman told him tbat: “Tbe Doyles made a man of *847 Mm and got Mm to invest Ms money- in land and that he appreciated it.” Another acquaintance oí many years, for whom Dieckman had worked, testified:

“He talked to me about his property and about the Doyles. He told me that the Doyles were his best friends and he called her [Clara Doyle] his little girl, and that she was his best friend. * * * He said the Doyles always helped him when he was in need and he said I could come any day there to get help, and he said Doyle helped him get his property.”

Charles Koblassa, a farmer, merchant, butcher and cattle buyer, testified:

“I knew Henry Dieckman about twenty-five years before his death. About six or eight years ago I bought cattle from him and asked him if he had any relatives in the old country. He said yes, I got some brothers in the old country. I said have you any brothers here you can leave your property to. He said it wouldn’t do any good because my relation don’t get anything out of my property and that he wasn’t used right in the old country.”

John Wright of Mitchell county, was an acquaintance of 40 years, for whom Dieckman had built a house, bam and hog house, and had done other work from 1900 to 1922. They visited at each other’s homes two or three times a year until the death of Dieckman. He testified that about eight or ten years before Dieckman’s death, the latter talked to him about the Doyles and his property. “He said Mr. Doyle had started him out in farming and got him to buy some land and when he got through with it he expected it to go back to the Doyles. * * * He didn’t tell me which Doyle. I don’t think he mentioned that. He said he expected it to go back to the Doyles. He didn’t say he had made a will leaving it to Clara Doyle.”

Frank Doyle testified:

“I live in Deerfield Township, in Chickasaw County and have lived there for sixty years. I knew Henry Dieckman for a period of forty-five years before he died. He worked on our place for my father, Matt Doyle. He owned land near father’s land. My father died in 1923 and I found papers in his safety deposit box which belonged to Henry Dieckman, *848 snob as deeds and abstracts for land and some bad notes and receipts. I did not find any will amongst those papers. Those papers came into my possession on the 2nd day of September, 1923, and I later delivered them to County Attorney Kennedy. Dieekman knew the papers were in my possession for after my father died I told him I had the papers and asked him if he wanted them or if he wanted me to take care of them and he told me to take care of them.”

Frank; Clark, of Mason City, testified that in 1918 he farmed about a mile and three quarters from Dieekman’s place, and at that time he spoke of his property, and that Matt Doyle had got him to buy it, and that he was going to leave his property to Clara Doyle. On cross-examination he said that in 1937 when the plaintiff called him he told her that Dieekman had never said to him that he “was making a will in her favor.”

The plaintiff testified that she had known Dieekman since about 42 years ago when he first came to work at her father’s place. “I was always good to him because he was a friend of father. I was a small girl then and carried water for him and ran errands for him. We would go there to call on him and visit and pick flowers and grapes and he would go with us and help us and there were never any unpleasant relations between us. I was there at the time of his death. He was very low and I leaned over and asked him if he knew me. I said this was Clara Doyle and he said ‘Clara’ once or twice. After I told him that, he began to grope around beside him and he handed me a paper wrapped in a cloth. It was a German newspaper, nothing but a German newspaper. I was present when he died on the 15th day of May, 1937, and he handed me this paper about an hour before he died. He was very weak at the time. I am a daughter of Matt Doyle and I knew that some of Mr. Dieekman’s papers were in father’s box at the time of father’s death.

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289 N.W. 450, 227 Iowa 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodale-v-murray-iowa-1940.