Hull v. Padgett

223 N.W. 154, 207 Iowa 430
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 23, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 223 N.W. 154 (Hull v. Padgett) 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
Hull v. Padgett, 223 N.W. 154, 207 Iowa 430 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

Morling, J. —

The ultimate question in the case is whether plaintiff was merely the hired servant of decedent or a copartner with her in the business of farming and in the property acquired thereunder. Plaintiff (commonly called Sherman> or Sherm), in 1891 and 1892, worked as a farm hand on a farm which had belonged to decedent’s father, and on which decedent and her mother were living. It is claimed by defendants that the mother was operating this farm, and plaintiff was in her employ, not only during those first two years, but until the mother’s death, in 1900.

Plaintiff quit in 1892, and returned in 1893. Did he return as a hired hand, and as the employee of the mother, or did he and decedent become coproprietors or copartners ? 66 acres of the farm, including the buildings, had been set off as the property of the mother. 22 acres, largely brush land, then worth $35 per acre, had been set off to decedent. The remaining 32 acres belonged to decedent’s brothers and sisters, the defendants.

*432 A neighbor, who had known plaintiff 45 years, testified that he knew, when plaintiff first went to work, that decedent wanted to hire him. ‘ ‘ I told him that Miss Padgett had requested me to send her a hand, and I recommended her to Mr. Moore, and he hired to her.” -A neighbor across the road testified, without objection, “I understood that Ollie run the place while her mother .was living.” An intimate friend of decedent’s testified that decedent, after plaintiff came back, expressed her pleasure “to think she got him back,” and “said she guessed she got him to stay now. They were working together.” It was stipulated that no personal property had been assessed to the mother from 1892 .to 1900. When the mother died, in 1900, she left no personal property except three horses, a sleigh, one spring wagon, and household furniture. She still owned her 66 acres. The interest of decedent’s brothers and sisters in the father’s farm was purchased. In 1898, an 80 called the Pomeroy 80 was purchased. The daughter of one of defendants testified that she heard decedent speak about the purchase of land belonging to the heirs.

“She has said, ‘when Sherm and I bought,’ ‘when we bought;’ and I have heard her speak both ways. When they bought the heirs, and when they bought the last 80, — the Pomeroy 80. * * * Q. Referring to the hogs and stock and land, how would she refer to it? A. ‘As Sherman and I, or we.’ * * * I remember, about two years before she passed away, she told me in the fall she would like to go away for her health to a milder climate, but she didn’t want to go away and leave Sherman; that he had as poor health as she had, and she didn’t think it would be right for her to go. That ‘he has the same interest here as. I have. It wouldn’t be right for me to go and him stay.’ She said, ‘I think the thing for us to do is to rent the farm, and both go away for our health.’ * * * She often said, ‘We both worked hard;’ that she thought they needed a rest. That was when she was speaking about renting the farm. That they both worked so hard to pay off the debts, and they had gotten to the place where they could rest easier, and she thought they both ought to leave the farm.”

After the mother’s death, a purchase of the interest of the other heirs in the mother’s 66 acres was made. The evidence is undisputed that plaintiff and decedent together borrowed money *433 to make payments on land purchased, and together they signed notes for the money borrowed. Neither decedent nor plaintiff had means of any consequence, except what was made from their fanning. A witness testified to renting 85 acres to decedent and plaintiff, some 15 years before the trial; that decedent said “they [decedent and plaintiff] was working together,” and as to what they owned, “they owned it together.” One of the laborers on the farm testified that he was employed by plaintiff, and heard decedent say “ ‘that we bought the north eighty;’ heard her say, ‘We bought out the other heirs’ interest in the farm, and paid the money for it.’ ” A neighbor testified that decedent said, on more than one occasion, that she and plaintiff “were in partnership,” and that he had so known from her statements 30 years or more; that plaintiff asked him if he. would loan plaintiff and decedent $1,000; that he loaned the money, and “if I remember right, they both signed” the note. Asked whether, in his visits and talks with decedent, decedent said anything with reference to the purchase of any lands out there, he answered, ‘ ‘ She said they had bought such and such a piece of land.” A banker testified that decedent wanted to borrow $2,000, and said that she and plaintiff would sign the note together, which they did.

“She made the remark when he was talking about the security. She said that Sherman would sign the note; would be in together. As I remember rightly, I said, ‘Sherman is working for you by the month.’ She spoke in this way, she said, ‘no,’ she and Sherm was operating together. * * * She said that she and Sherman were partners; that was the sum and substance of it. * * * It was a good while ago.”

A farmer who testified that he worked for decedent in 1919 and 1920 said that plaintiff paid him part of the time, and decedent part of the time, and that plaintiff directed his work; says that, in talking about a carload of hogs:

“I asked her if she would give me over all that much they would fetch. She said: ‘Why, no. What would I have left, after Sherman got his half, and my half, and me give you my half?’ I said, ‘Why, does Sherman get half of this?’ She said, ‘Half of everything we get goes to Sherm.’ ”

*434 Another banker testified that he had written some fire insurance for them; that decedent said ‘ ‘ they were farming there together * * * were running it [the farm] in partnership. * * * Did she use the term ‘partnership?’ A. Yes; her and Mr. Moore had the stock in partnership. That was between 1915 and 1920.” A stock buyer testified that decedent and plaintiff “always said it didn’t make any difference which one got the money. It was all the same. They were in partnership.” Another stock buyer says that “I bought stuff of Sherman several times in those years, cattle and sheep both. * * * I always paid Mr. Moore by check;” that, one time, the matter of her health came up. She said “her and Sherman had worked hard all their life, and she said they was going to take a trip; they wasn’t able to do the work any more, — intended to get out for the winter and leave it.” Some twelve witnesses testified to statements made by decedent at different times, in substance that she and plaintiff were partners, or equally interested, or owned the property together. It is shown that decedent and plaintiff rented land together. Witnesses testified that decedent said that they had the land paid for; that they were out of debt; that they had both worked hard, in order to pay for the place and have a home, and they did not want to leave, and one go away for their health, and the other not go; “that they both worked so hard to pay off the debts, and they had gotten to the place where they could rest easier, and she thought they both ought to leave the farm.” “She said Sherman wasn’t able to work. He would just work, and she didn’t want him to. * # * ‘He doesn’t have to work.

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Bluebook (online)
223 N.W. 154, 207 Iowa 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hull-v-padgett-iowa-1929.