In Re Estate of Cuykendall

273 N.W. 117, 223 Iowa 526
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 4, 1937
DocketNo. 43642.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 273 N.W. 117 (In Re Estate of Cuykendall) 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 Cuykendall, 273 N.W. 117, 223 Iowa 526 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Donegan, J.

During his lifetime, J. W. Cuykendall lived in the city of Atlantic, Iowa. His residence was situated toward the outskirts of the city and was surrounded by a considerable tract of land. Approximately 160' feet southwest of the residence there was a two-story garage, on the ground floor of which automobiles were stored, and in the second story of which living quarters were located. At the time here involved these living quarters were occupied by Cuykendall’s chauffeur, Janus Petersen, and his family. A driveway, which entered the grounds from the west side of Chestnut street, went along the south side of the house and then, in a slightly southwesterly direction, to the garage. There was a large porch that extended across the east, or front end of the house, and also for some distance to the west along the south side thereof. At the west end of this porch, as it extended along the south side of the house, steps entered the porch from the driveway, and a roof, extending from the porch over the driveway, formed a porte-cochere. On the evening of September 16, 1928, the chauffeur, Janus Petersen, went to the Rock Island railway station to meet Mrs. Cuykendall, who was returning to Atlantic on a train arriving about 8:30 o’clock, and took her to the Cuykendall home. The chauffeur, Petersen, let Mrs. Cuykendall out of the automobile under the porte-cochere and placed her luggage on the porch. He then proceeded to the garage, where he left the automobile, and returned to the place where he had left the luggage. At this point he was met by Mrs. Cuykendall, who told him that Mr. Cuyken *528 dall had a revolver and was threatening to shoot both her and Petersen, and asked him to call the police. Petersen hastened back to the garage for the purpose of telephoning to the police, and had passed to the inside of and was in the act of closing a door on the east side of and near the southeast corner of the garage, which opened onto a stairway to his living quarters, when he heard a shot and was showered with glass from the top part of this door. He then went upstairs and called the police, who arrived in a few minutes and had some conversation with Petersen and with Mrs. Cuykendall. The police were told what had happened and requested to go into the house and get the revolver from Mr. Cuykendall, but refused to do so without a warrant. After some talk the police left, and sometime later Petersen went into the house and proceeded upstairs therein and into Mr. Cuykendall’s room and obtained the revolver. Nothing further of any special importance occurred that night, but, on the following morning, Mr. and Mrs. Petersen were requested to g’o to the Cuykendall residence and there met Mr. and Mrs. Cuykendall and a servant named Minnie Paulsen in the library. After some reference had been made to the occurrences of the night before, Mr. Cuykendall stated that he intended to lay both Mrs. Cuykendall and Petersen out, and Mrs. Cuykendall then stated, in substance, that Cuykendall should pay Petersen damages, and that he should pay $15,000. Petersen stated he would take $10,000, and Mr. Cuykendall then said that was too much, but that he would be paid $6,000, to be paid after Cuykendall’s death, and Petersen said that would be all right. Cuykendall then said in substance: ‘ ‘ Then it is agreed that nothing is to be said about this from now on,” and Petersen answered, “All right. ’ ’

Following these occurrences, Petersen remained in the employ of Cuykendall as chauffeur, yardman and general handy man until the death of Mrs. Cuykendall in 1933, and thereafter he continued in the same employment, but, in addition to his other duties, performed the duties of a nurse and attendant for Mr. Cuykendall until Cuykendall’s death in February, 1935. Administration was taken out upon Mr. Cuykendall’s estate and, on July 10, 1935, Petersen filed a claim against the estate in two counts. As the only question presented on this appeal arises out of the claim for $6,000, on the contract alleged in the *529 first count, it is unnecessary to devote any attention to the other count of said claim.

On the trial of the case evidence was introduced in behalf of the claimant which tended to support the facts substantially as set out above. At the close of the claimant’s evidence the defendant administrator moved the court for a directed verdict on division one of plaintiff’s claim, “for the reason that the evidence clearly shows that part of the consideration and apparently a major part was that the claimant and his wife should conceal the commission of an alleged crime, which the claimant alleges was committed by the deceased. And that therefore a part of the consideration upon which the claim set forth in division one of plaintiff’s petition was founded, is against public policy and illegal and therefore the contract itself illegal and unenforceable and void.” This motion was sustained by the trial court and, pursuant to the court’s order, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, and judgment was entered thereon. From this order and judgment the claimant appeals.

As above stated, only one question is presented by this appeal — did the trial court err in directing the jury to return a verdict against the claimant on count one of his claim? Appellant contends that there is nothing in the evidence, as to the terms of the contract on which his claim is based, that justifies the holding of the trial court that there was any agreement “that the claimant and his wife should conceal the commission of an alleged crime, which the claimant alleges, was committed by the deceased.” With this contention of the appellant we are disposed to agree. It is a well-established rule of law, for which citation of authority is unnecessary, that, in considering a motion for a directed verdict, the evidence in behalf of the party against whom the verdict is sought to be directed, and all reasonable inferences therefrom, must be accepted as true. It must, therefore, be accepted as true that, at the time this motion for a directed verdict was before the court for ruling thereon, the evidence in behalf of the claimant tended to show that an assault had been made upon claimant by Cuykendall on the evening of September 16, 1928, and that Cuykendall had agreed that $6,000 would be paid to claimant after Cuykendall’s death. It is elementary, of course, that it is not necessary, in order to establish an assault, to show that there was also a battery, or that the person assaulted suffered any particular bodily injury as the *530 result of such assault. It is also elementary that one upon whom an unjustified assault is made has a civil cause of action for damages against the person making the assault. What is there in the evidence to show that.the agreement made on the morning following the assault was not an agreement in settlement of this civil cause of action that the claimant had against the deceased for the unjustified assault, instead of an agreement to conceal the commission of a crime ?

Minnie Norgaard (formerly Minnie Paulsen) stated that, in the conference in the library on the morning following the shooting, “I heard Mrs. Cuykendall say that he (Mr. Cuykendall) should make some kind of settlement with John Petersen about this shooting affair the night before.” Mrs. Petersen testified that “Mr. Cuykendall said he intended to lay both Mrs. Cuykendall and my husband out, and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
273 N.W. 117, 223 Iowa 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-cuykendall-iowa-1937.