In Re Estate of Clark

290 N.W. 13, 228 Iowa 75
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 6, 1940
DocketNo. 44306., No. 44419., No. 44589.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 13 (In Re Estate of Clark) 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
In Re Estate of Clark, 290 N.W. 13, 228 Iowa 75 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

Sadie F. Clark died intestate, at the age of about 70 years, on July 31, 1935, leaving an estate, valued by the collateral inheritance appraisers as follows: Beal estate, both city and farm property, at $102,250; cash on hand, $17,803.55; federal, county, road, and private bonds, at $135,505.01; real-estate mortgages, at $14,790.25; jewelry, at $377.50, and household furniture and wearing apparel, at $350. She had received all of this property as the sole beneficiary under the last will and testament of her husband, Albert A. Clark, who had died on July 21, 1921, at the age of 61 years. Starting life as an abandoned illegitimate child, Clark acquired this property by his personal efforts. Mrs. Clark suffered a nerve stroke of some ldnd in February 1908 which impaired her mind to some extent. While her condition required the care of practical nurses thereafter, she at all times conversed with and recognized those about her, and she was not placed under guardianship until March 20, 1926. Her disability continued until her death. She never married after the death of her husband, and so far as known, or could be ascertained, she left no heirs of her blood, either ascending, descending, or collateral. She came to Omaha in the late eighties, and for a year or more was an inmate of a house of prostitution.

Albert A. Clark, not yet 30 years old, was in the small loan business in Council Bluffs. He was the owner of a business building at a corner of Main and Broadway, on the second floor of which was his office and place of business, and on the third floor was his living apartment. About 1889, Sadie Clark, then known as Sadie Moore, was in his office, as clerk or secretary, and in his apartmént, as housekeeper. This arrangement con *79 tinued until the early nineties when he stated that they were married, and he introduced her and presented her generally as his wife. .They lived in the apartment, as husband and wife, continuously until several years after 1900. During all of this time she continued to help him in the office. They then moved .into the old home at 507 Clark avenue, which his mother and her second husband, Dr. F. C. Clark, had acquired in 1866, where they continued to live, as husband and wife, until his death. Except for some talk early in their relationship, no one ever questioned their marital status. They were generally reputed to be married. They were so known to the businessmen, tradesmen, professional men, and to the public generally. Services were rendered and merchandise was sold and charged to them as Mr. and Mrs. Clark. Commencing on the 10th day of November 1897, and continuing to 1918, they executed and acknowledged 18 conveyances of real estate, as husband and wife. All of these were received by the grantees and placed of record. The public city directories of Council Bluffs listed them as husband and; wife, and, after his death, she was listed as his widow. On August 24, 1899, he executed his last will, which he never thereafter changed, in which he stated:

“I will, devise and bequeath unto my wife Sadie F. Clark, all of my estate of which I may die seized * * * I hereby appoint my wife Sadie F. Clark the sole executrix of this my last will and testament, and direct that she be not required to give any bonds as such.”

This will was probated, and four days after the testator’s death, on July 25, 1921, Sadie F. Clark executed a petition for the appointment of John M. Galvin, as administrator with the will annexed, in which she states:

“Your petitioner respectfully represents: That she is the widow and sole devisee and beneficiary under the last will and testament of Albert A. Clark.”

She signed and swore to this paper before Daniel T. Sulli *80 van, the present administrator of her estate, who designates himself as “appellee,” herein.

On July 3, 1939, an order of court, by Judge O. D. Wheeler, was filed in the estate of Albert A. Clark, approving the final report therein, which states:

“The Court especially finds that said Albert A. Clark left surviving him as his sole beneficiary and devisee, his wife, Sadie F. Clark; * * * ”

This adjudication of their marital status stands unquestioned of record. Witnesses unrelated to any of the petitioning heirs and uninterested and of good repute, so far as the record shows, testified to the general reputation in the community, that they were man and wife. No witness and no item of evidence contradicts this record. In fact, the appellees State of Iowa and its Comptroller put in no testimony or evidence, and the appellee administrator put but one witness on the stand, and that was on another issue.

After her husband’s death, Mr. Galvin, the administrator of his estate, and Daniel T. Sullivan, of his law firm, in charge of Mrs. Clark’s property, sought to learn from her something of her past and her people, but received no information in any way helpful. The appellants Despecher et al., through an attorney, during those years, sent out pictures of Mrs. Clark to learn something of her. Some publicity was given to the matter and some further search was made for her blood relatives, by those in charge of her property, before her death. Relatives of her husband claimed that she always maintained that she had been left as a foundling on the doorstep of an orphanage, and that she had no knowledge of her origin or of her people. About 1929 a man named Edward Howard Smith, from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, called upon her and claimed that he recognized her as a long lost sister, and that another sister by the name of Anna Call, lived at Unity, Ohio. Mrs. Clark in no wajr recognized Smith. After his appointment- as administrator, Mr. Sullivan, in his search for blood heirs of the decedent, wrote by registered mail to Anna Call and her brother, and on November *81 11, 1935, she answered with a letter which very definitely eliminated them as claimants, since it stated that the Sadie Clark, who was her sister, was born in July 1879. Other evidence in the record clearly shows that there was no basis for the claim of herself or her brother. Neither of them ever pressed their claim further.

Before proceeding further in this complicated matter we believe it will be clarifying to set out, as briefly as possible, something of the lineage of Albert A. Clark, through whom all of the appellants claim title to this estate, as the record tends to disclose it. Speaking first of his mother, of whom all parties concede he was the illegitimate son, it appears that Mary Elizabeth Page, the daughter of Daniel Augustus Page, a Baptist minister, was bom February 29, 1836, at Napierville, Illinois, and in 1850 married Robert Emmett Babbitt. To this union two children were born, both at Napierville — one Louisa Marie, on April 23, 1855, and William Newton, on September 7, 1856. In the late fifties the family came to the town of Lewis in western Cass county, Iowa. Whether the father came with them or had gone farther west earlier does not appear, but word came back to the family in 1858 that he had died from gangrenous poisoning in New Mexico. The mother of Mrs. Babbitt, and two sisters of the latter, Adelia and Sobrina Page Shields, and one or two brothers had also come to Cass county with the family.

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 13, 228 Iowa 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-clark-iowa-1940.