Howes v. Sutton

268 N.W. 164, 221 Iowa 1326
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 19, 1936
DocketNo. 43478.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 268 N.W. 164 (Howes v. Sutton) 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
Howes v. Sutton, 268 N.W. 164, 221 Iowa 1326 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

R. N. Howes, Sr., appellee in this case, brought suit for an accounting from L. F. Sutton, an attorney at Clinton, Iowa, and appellant herein, on dealings with said Sutton since 1916. The facts show that Mary Lou Howes transferred all her right, title and interest in 320 acres of land, more or less, situated in Alberta, Canada, to the defendant Sutton, who made a written agreement to pay to Mary Lou Howes one-half of all he received as profit on the said 320 acres, and to cancel a second mortgage he held. On May 3, 1919, Mary Lou Howes assigned this contract to Frank B. Howes, and on September 7, 1933, Frank B. Howes, assigned the contract to the appellee herein, R. N. Howes, Sr.

This action was commenced sometime in 1934, about eighteen years after the execution of the instrument to Mary Lou Howes by Sutton. The petition as finally amended alleged the transfer of title in the Canada land to the defendant Sutton, and alleged that Sutton received about $8,000 and interest thereon at five per cent until final payment was made in 1929 or 1930; that the defendant concealed the facts concerning said transaction and sale, intending to defraud plaintiff. The prayer of the petition of plaintiff asked that the defendant be required to account for the proceeds received from the sale of the land involved; that he be given judgment for any amount found to be due plaintiff, and for general relief.

*1328 After several motions were passed upon, defendant filed an answer containing a general denial; bnt admitted tbe execution of the instrument dated August 15, 1916, the conveyance of the land by Mary Lou Howes to the defendant, and the sale of the real estate under contract on or about the 20th of April, 1917. He alleged he loaned the plaintiff $567 to enable him to stay foreclosure proceedings against said real estate in the Province of Alberta, Canada, and that the payment of this was secured by second mortgage on the homestead of plaintiff and his wife in Clinton, Iowa, and that by reason thereof the defendant was induced to go to Canada to carry out the plan. The defendant also alleged that at the time of the execution of the agreement herein referred to, the plaintiff represented that said Canada land was subject only to an encumbrance of $2,500 and interest since December 1, 1916; that the same had three miles of fencing, that 220 acres thereof were broken and under cultivation; and that relying on such representations said defendant executed the instrument, and on the 16th day of August, 1916, set out for Calgary, Canada. That such representations were false and were made for the purpose of inducing the defendant to make the agreement of August 15,1916, and that in fact the property was subject to a claim in excess of $2,500, and there was interest due from the first of December, 1916, on the mortgage, school taxes in the sum of $115.10, wild land taxes $23.60, and that the land was uncultivated, had been allowed to go back, and that by reason of such representations the execution of the instrument sued on was procured through the practice of fraud and deceit. The defendant also alleged that on his return from Canada, on or about September 1, 1916, he reported conditions to the plaintiff, that the best offer he had received on said property was the sum of $2,200 on contract, payable each year out of the proceeds derived from one-half of the crop, and that he was unable to rent the land unless he allowed the renter the sum of $3.50 per acre for breaking it'. He alleged that thereupon Mary Lou Howes accepted the surrender of the second mortgage $637, held by defendant against the Clinton, Iowa, property of plaintiff, and that defendant assumed the payment of taxes and mortgage on the'land in full payment for such conveyance. Defendant pleaded that at no time since his return from Canada had Mary Lou Howies, Frank B. How'es or R. N. Howes, Sr., made any demand on said defendant for the execution of the. contract agree *1329 ing to pay Mary Lou Howes one-half of any profit he might make on the sale of said Canada land, although said plaintiff R. N. Howes, Sr., was advised at the time of the sale of said real estate in April 1917; that by reason thereof any claim the plaintiff may have acquired through the alleged assignments is now barred by the statute of limitations, and said plaintiff is es-topped by reason of laches on account of his or his assign’s failure to make such demand for the execution of a contract agreeing to pay one-half of the profits. Such were the issues upon which the case was tried.

The testimony in the case is not very satisfactory, but it is sufficient to show that Sutton went to Canada very shortly after August 15, 1916; that Sutton advanced $567 to the plaintiff for the purpose of preventing foreclosure under the land mortgage, and that Howes, Sr., had not asked for an accounting* before his wife died in 1919, although he found out about the sale to Simpson before that. Howes also testified that Sutton gave him $250 in 1919 and he took his wife to Rochester. He could not say how long it was before he next said anything to Sutton. Plaintiff also testified that he talked with the defendant in the 20’s, spoke to him a good many times during that time, and that the first time defendant absolutely refused to do anything* was in 1933.

Simpson, who purchased the land of defendant, lived in Ontario, Canada; he testified he was acquainted with Mr. Sutton, and met him at the time he signed the contract for the Howes land, which was on the 20th of April, 1917. On November 7, 1927, Sutton wrote a letter to Simpson, the purchaser of the Canada land, saying:

“ * * * The original contract was for $8000, but was not to draw interest until the first day of January, 1918, so I began my computation of interest on $7000 as of the first day of January, 1918, dating back your credit of $1000 to that date. I have figured simple interest only and find that there is a balance due on contract of $5331.91 on the first day of November, 1927. In order to help you out, I am willing to accept $5000 at this time and give you deed.”

The testimony shows that Sutton had a contract for the land, selling it at $8,000 on the crop payment plan. That as late as November 7, 1927, he was still claiming* as due on the contract $5,331.91, but agreed to accept $5,000; and again on *1330 November 15th, on account of misplaced credit, he agreed to take $4,600 as balance due on the contract. The testimony further shows that Simpson paid $8,000, less $160 thrown off for cash, and in addition thereto he paid interest after the first two years at five per cent. The written statement signed by Sutton August 15, 1916, was as follows:

“Mary Lou Howes has transferred to me the following property, W. 2' 33-3-16, Alberta, Canada, & I hold a second mortgage against her home in Clinton, Iowa, for $567.00. I am going to Canada & if transfer is filed & I get title subject to mtg. of $2500 & int. since Dec. 1916 only I am to return mortgage & note $567 cancelled & give her an agreement that I will pay her, when sold, % of all I receive as profit on said 320 acres.
L. F. Sutton.”

Under this contract Sutton was really holding the land as trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
268 N.W. 164, 221 Iowa 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howes-v-sutton-iowa-1936.