Hatcher v. Sawyer

52 N.W.2d 490, 243 Iowa 858, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 494
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 1, 1952
Docket47981
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 52 N.W.2d 490 (Hatcher v. Sawyer) 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. Sawyer, 52 N.W.2d 490, 243 Iowa 858, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 494 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

WenNerstrum, J.

Plaintiffs in an action in equity sought specific performance of a claimed oral contract entered into between W. T. Wadsworth, now deceased, the father of plaintiffs, and his wife, their mother who predeceased him. It is claimed the father agreed with his wife to' leave to the plaintiffs the property owned by him. They also sought judgment against the defendant Merle Sawyer in the amount of $4000 with interest at five per cent per annum from April 27, 1950, for money claimed to have been turned over by their father to said Sawyer after the claimed oral contract was made. They also asked for a writ of injunction enjoining the admission to probate of an instrument filed as the last will and testament of their father and which they claim is violative of the contract entered into by him with their mother. Merle Sawyer, a nephew of W. T. Wadsworth, and his son, Ronald Sawyer, were beneficiaries under the last will of the father, along with the two plaintiffs and the sons of the plaintiffs. Each beneficiary of this will was to receive a one-sixth share of the estate. The two Sawyers denied the making of the claimed oral contract and alleged that such a contract, if made, was contrary to law, public policy, void, without consideration, and was obtained by coercion and duress.

Merle Sawyer in an amendment to his. answer alleged that he was the holder of a note in the principal amount of $1000 given to him by W. T. Wadsworth on November 15, 1941, and that he was entitled' to have said note allowed as a claim against the estate. The trial court entered a decree wherein it established the contract sued on by the plaintiffs. It upheld the gift of $4000 made by Wadsworth io the defendant Merle Sawyer, found the $1000 note to Sawyer was a valid instrument and established it as a claim, enjoined the admission to probate of the instrument filed as the last will and testament of W. T. Wads-worth and directed the special administrator to pay to the defendant Merle Sawyer $1000 with interest at seven per cent per annum from the date of the death of W. T. Wadsworth. It fur *861 ther directed the special administrator to pay one half of the remaining proceeds of the personal property to each of the plaintiffs and decreed them to be the owners of the real estate described in the petition. It also entered a judgment against the defendants Merle Sawyer and Eonald Sawyer for costs.

The plaintiffs, the two daughters, who were the beneficiaries under the claimed contract between W. T. Wadsworth and his wife, appealed from that part of the decree and judgment which denied the recovery of $4000 and interest from the defendant Merle Sawyer, and which decree also ordered the special administrator of the W. T. Wadsworth estate to- pay to Merle Sawyer the sum of $1000 and interest. The two Sawyers have also appealed from the relief granted to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs will be hereinafter referred to as the appellants and Merle Sawyer and Ronald Sawyer as cross-appellants.

W. T. Wadsworth and Nellie Wadsworth were husband and wife and Avere the parents of Blanche Hatcher and Hila Ewing, the plaintiffs in this action and the appellants in this appeal. They were the only children of the Wadsworths. Blanche Hatch-er is married and has one son, LaVerne Hatcher. Hila Ewing is also married and has one son, Eugene Ewing. The two grandsons were made defendants in this action and are appellees herein. Merle Sawyer is a nephew of W. T. Wadsworth, deceased, his mother being a sister of Wadsworth. Ronald Sawyer is a son of Merle Sawyer.

Nellie Wadsworth died on January 6, 1949, and W. T. Wadsworth, her husband, died on April 27, 1950. Prior to the 30th of December, 1948, Nellie Wadsworth was the owner of a farm of one hundred acres situated in Mahaska County, Iowa, and was also the owner of a rent check in the amount of $600 and certain household furniture and other personal property. Prior to the last-named date W. T. Wadsworth was the owner of a residence property in Oskaloosa which was his home and that of his wife. He also had United States bonds, Series G, of the face value of $15,000 and which were payable to himself or to Mrs. Nellie Wadsworth. They also had a joint checking account in the amount of $3407.74. On or prior to December 28, 1948, Nellie Wadsworth had arranged for the preparation of a deed conveying, the one hundred acres to her grandson Ed *862 ward LaVerne Hatcher. This deed was subject to a life estate in William T. Wadsworth. It had been prepared in the office of an Oskaloosa attorney, but prior to that date had not been signed or delivered. On December 28, 1948, John S. Sproatt, the attorney previously referred to, was asked to come to the Wads-worth home, which he did, and he took with him the deed which had been prepared. This deed to LaVerne Hatcher was signed on the date mentioned by Mrs. Wadsworth, and she instructed Mr. Sproatt to keep it until he received further instructions. On December 30, 1948, the attorney was again called to the Wadsworth home and was directed .to bring the deed with him.

The record discloses that during October 1948 Mrs. Wads-worth had become ill and that on the day following Thanksgiving, 1948, she had a stroke. Her doctor testified that in his opinion she was mentally and physically weakened by reason of her condition, that during the last ten days before her death she was more easily influenced, and also in his opinion, legally incompetent to carry on business transactions during that ten-day period. A witness who had been in the home during the last several months of Mrs. Wadsworth’s life testified that there had been arguments between Mrs. Wadsworth and her husband relative to the disposition of their- property. Another witness who was assisting at the home testified that on December 28, 1948, at the direction of Mrs. Wadsworth, she called John S. Sproatt, the attorney, and that he came to the home and brought with him a deed. She also testified that the grantee named in this deed was Edward LaVerne Hatcher, which deed was signed on that date by Mrs. Wadsworth. On December 30, 1948, according to the testimony of a Mrs. Spurgeon, she was told by Mrs. Wadsworth that she and her husband had reached an agreement and that she, Mrs. Wadsworth, would give the one hundred acres to her two grandsons, Eugene Ewing and LaVerne Hatcher, and that Mr. Wadsworth had agreed to take a life estate in the land, that he was not to take anything in addition to this life interest, and that Mr. Wadsworth was to leave the balance to their daughters.

On the occasion of the second visit of John S. Sproatt to the Wadsworth home on December 30, 1948, he was in Mrs. Wads* worth’s room and Mr. Wadsworth was also present. Inquiry was made of the attorney if the deed could be torn up or.the *863 name of William Eugene Ewing added to it. The .attorney told her the name could'be added and she requested him to do so. The attorney then returned to his office to change the deed as directed and then went back to the Wadsworth home with the changed deed which showed that it was made to William Eugene Ewing and Edward LaVerne Hatcher as grantees and that the husband, William Wadsworth, had a life estate. The record then shows that she stated that was the way she wanted it and she acknowledged the signing of the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.W.2d 490, 243 Iowa 858, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatcher-v-sawyer-iowa-1952.