Hatcher v. Day

6 N.W. 24, 53 Iowa 671
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 10, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 6 N.W. 24 (Hatcher v. Day) 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
Hatcher v. Day, 6 N.W. 24, 53 Iowa 671 (iowa 1880).

Opinion

Adams, On. J.

-The evidence in this case is voluminous and conflicting, but we have been greatly aided in the examination of the case by the clear and systematic manner in which it has been presented by counsel.

The history of the transactions involved dates from August, 1864. At that time Mahlon B. Hatcher, the grantor and ancestor, resided in Cadiz, Ohio. He had not long before married the plaintiff Mary K. G. Hatcher, as his third wife. No children resulted from the union. All his nine children, parties to this action, were the children of his first wife. At the time of his third marriage, he was worth, we think, according to the evidence, about $25,000, about two-thirds of his property being in Ohio, and the remainder in Iowa, consisting of lands. Previous to that time, it appears that he had advanced large sums in assisting two of his sons, Joseph and Samuel, though this fact, perhaps, is not very clearly established by legitimate evidence. Soon after h'is third marriage he conceived the idea of deeding to a portion of his children the gi-eater part of his Iowa lands. In July, 1864, he executed several deeds for that purpose, his wife, Mary K. G., joining with him. In August of the same year he executed to his daughter Rebecca A. Day the deed in question, his wife, Mary K. G., joining with him. The deeds to the children were made by him as gifts or advancements to the children, as his wife well knew. After the execution of these deeds, Mahlon still remained the owner of valuable property in Ohio. Subsequently he sold this property and removed to [673]*673Iowa, engaging to some extent in farming, and becoming interested, to some extent, in a hardware store, with his son-in-law II. II. Day.

In the meantime he purchased the hotel property in controversy. In 1869, he executed a deed of the property to his son Elijah, his wife joining, with the understanding that the property was sold to Elijah for its full value.

i. conveyTOisini^nrf" ower: irai.ui. I. "We proceed first to inquire whether Mrs. Hatcher’s signature to the deed to Mrs. Day was procured by fraud, This deed was executed in Cadiz, Ohio. Mrs. Day was residing in Iowa,and had no knowledge Q£ ^ ¿ee¿ a^. ^16 nor for a considerable time afterwards. If any fraud was practiced upon Mrs. Hatcher it was practiced upon her by her husband. It is urged with great zeal by her counsel that the object of the conveyance was to defeat her dower right in the property.

The object, of course, and only object of her joining in the deed, was to bar her right of dower. But this she understood. She was not misled in regard to the legal effect of her act, nor does she claim that she was. Nor was she misled in regard to the quantity of land conveyed, the number of acres being expressly stated in the deed. She claims, however, that she was misled and defrauded in regard to the character of the land.

That her husband misled and defrauded her we see very little, if any, evidence except her own testimony. But, under section 3639 of the Code, we think her testimony uj>on this point is inadmissible. We have, however, looked into it, and we have to say that it fails to satisfy us that her husband was guilty of anything which would amount to fraud, taking her statement as to what he said and did to be true. She says that her husband told her that he was going to give each of his children a piece of wild land. She claims that she signed the deed in question under the supposition that the land described in it was wild land, whereas the fact is that eighty acres of it was under cultivation and fenced, and had a small [674]*674house upon it. She does not say that her husband told her that this land was wild. In July previous she and her husband had executed deeds to the children of several tracts of wild land. In August they executed the deed to Mrs. Day, and her husband executed to herself ■ a deed of a tract, both of which she claims she understood were wild, but both contained improvements. It is evident that she acquired her understanding from what was said about the lands deeded in July. It is further evident that the difference between Conveying to Mrs. Day improved land instead of unimproved was not a material consideration with her. She said, speaking of the transaction generally, that she knew nothing about it, and cared nothing about it. She knew he was not giving away the Ohio'property. From the Iowa property she appears to have been entirely willing that her husband should make gifts or advancements to the children. According to her own testimony she paid no attention to the quantity or value given. Indeed even now it is not insisted that the land conveyed to Mrs. Day was more valuable than she supposed. It was not in fact very valuable with all its improvement. Mr. Hatcher had just purchased it for $3,000, or a little less than $17 an acre. She nowhere says that if she had been told that the land was worth $3,000 she would have refused to join in making so large an advancement. • Her statement that she knew nothing about this matter of advancements, and cared nothing about it, satisfies us clearly that she would not have refused. She does say that it is hardly probable that she would have joined, because their living was to come from this land. But with fifteen or twenty thousand dollars worth of other property, she had no reason to think that her husband was depriving himself and her of a living.

Besides, notwithstanding the execution of the deed to Mrs. Day, the use and enjoyment of the property were retained by Mr. Hatcher for twelve years, and until his death. Hatcher and wife made their home upon it awhile, and as long, wc judge, as she was non ten ted to live there. "When Mrs. [675]*675Hatcher joined in the deed, she had reason to suppose that possession of the property would be transferred immediately. The advancement, in the way it was actually made, was not, we think, as large as it would have been if it had accorded in every respect with Mrs: Hatcher’s supposition.

We cannot set aside the deed for fraud, unless we are well satisfied, not only that Hatcher made false statements to his wife, but that she was induced thereby to join in the deed when she would not otherwise have clone so. The evidence fails to satisfy us that she would have refused, taking her own testimony as to what was said to her, and how the transaction presented itself to her at that time.

Several witnesses, parties in interest or members of their families, were introduced who testified to what they heard Mrs. Day say about the deed. But Mrs. Day, if she bad been present when the deed was executed, could not have known more in regard to the statements made to Mrs. Hatcher to procure her signature than Mrs. Hatcher herself knew. It is unnecessary, therefore, for us to review the testimony of these witnesses.

In our opinion no fraud was practiced upon Mrs. Hatcher, in procuring her signature to the deed.

II. Was her signature to the deed of the hotel property to Elijah Hatcher procured by fraud?

3 _.__. • This transaction was ostensibly a sale, and not a gift. It was represented to Mrp. Hatcher as a sale, and she joined in the deed upon that supposition. If it was not a sale in fact, but a gift; her signature was obtained under a false pretence, and her dower, we think, is not barred. Upon this point the testimony of a large number of witnesses was taken, mostly parties (in interest or members of their families, and related to each other by blood or marriage, and we have to say that there is a most painful conflict.

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6 N.W. 24, 53 Iowa 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatcher-v-day-iowa-1880.