In Re Estate of Roberts

3 N.W.2d 161, 231 Iowa 1088
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1942
DocketNo. 45217.
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.W.2d 161 (In Re Estate of Roberts) 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 Roberts, 3 N.W.2d 161, 231 Iowa 1088 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

This is a claim in probate against the executrix of the Rickie Roberts estate, for judgment on a certain promissory note. There was attached to the claim a copy of the note, which showed that it was dated April 20, 1937, that it was due April 20, 1940, that it was in the amount of $7,500, drawing 6 per cent interest, and that there was due on the note at the date same was filed interest in the sum of $500, making a total amount for which the claim was filed in the amount of $8,000. That the note was payable to Floyd Roberts. That it was indorsed by the said Floyd Roberts, and that it is now the property of W. J. Snook, the claimant.

Jessie Ritter, executrix of the estate of Rickie Roberts, deceased, filed an answer in separate divisions which are as follows :

*1090 “Division One

That the said alleged promissory note is a false and forged instrument, and of no validity whatsoever.

“Division Two

That the said Claimant is not the holder thereof, for value, in due course before maturity, and without notice of its infirmities.

“Division Three

“That said alleged promissory note was not given by the said Rickie Roberts as the evidence of a debt or valid obligation, in that, at the time of the alleged execution thereof, said Floyd Roberts named as the payee therein was himself heavily indebted to said Rickie Roberts, and had not so conducted himself towards said Rickie Roberts, his mother, as to merit a gift of such amount or any amount whatsoever.

“That if the same was intended as a gift it was without consideration and not collectible in the hands of Floyd Roberts, and the Claimant knew, or should have known such facts in the exercise of reasonable diligence.

“Division Four

“That the Claimant was not acting in good faith in pretending to be the indorsee for value of said alleged note, but was acting fraudulently and in collusion with the said Floyd Roberts in pretending to be the indorsee for value before maturity, and in filing said note as a claim in said estate, intending thereby to collect a note, that in the hands of Floyd Roberts would have been invalid, and which would have been subject to just offsets and counterclaim.

'1 That said Floyd Roberts, and not the Claimant, is in fact, the real party in interest.

“Division Five

“That said Rickie Roberts, died prior to the alleged transfer of said promissory note to Claimant, and the same, if genuine, became and was a provable claim against said estate, even before the arrival of the maturity date upon the face thereof, and that by reason thereof the Claimant can not support the *1091 claim that his alleged acquisition thereof was for value in due course and before maturity.

“That by reason of the fact that said alleged promissory note, was provable upon the death of Rickie Roberts, and the further fact that she was dead at the time of the transfer, rendered it subject to all just claims owing by payee to the Executrix herein, as the legal representative of decedent.

“That also there existed such a defective spelling of the name Rickie Roberts, as to have put Claimant on inquiry.

“That he paid no adequate consideration for same, if any consideration whatsoever was in fact given.

“Division Six

“The Executrix herein denies each and every allegation made in said claim and not herein admitted.”

Claimant filed a reply to the answer, in which he denied generally and specifically each and every allegation contained in said answer, except that he admitted Jessie Ritter was the executrix of the estate of Rickie Roberts, and that he was the holder in due course of the note at the time he filed his claim against the estate.

There was a trial at which a great deal of evidence was offered, and at the close of the evidence .and after both parties had rested, claimant moved to withdraw from the consideration of the jury the issues tendered by division 3 of defendant’s answer, and also moved to withdraw from the consideration of the jury the issue tendered by that part of division 5 of defendant’s answer which related to a claimed defect in the spelling of the name Rickie Roberts on the instrument sued on, for the reason that the record showed without dispute that she sometimes spelled her name Rickie and sometimes Ricke. This motion was sustained by the trial court. Claimant further moved to withdraw from the consideration of the jury the issue tendered by division 4 of defendant’s answer which related to the good faith of the claimant in his transactions with Floyd Roberts whereby the note was transferred to the claimant; and he further moved to withdraw from the consideration of the jury all issues tendered by defendant’s answer on the question of whether or not the claimant purchased said note and was the *1092 holder in due course, for the reason that the law presumed the claimant to be a holder in due course until the contrary was shown,, and the proof having shown that the note in suit was not a gift by the maker to the payee, Floyd Roberts, and said note not having been given without consideration, therefore, consideration was presumed in the transfer and delivery of the note by the payee, Floyd Roberts, to the claimant, and there was no evidence in the record to sustain the issue of fraud and collusion as made by defendant in her answer, and that unless the fact of forgery was found, the note was collectible by the claimant; and he further moved the court to properly and adequately instruct the jury that all such issues were withdrawn from the consideration of the jury. The trial court sustained this motion.

This left only one of the pleaded defenses, to wit, whether or not the instrument sued on was a forged instrument. This was the sole question presented to the jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the estate, and the claimant, W. J. Snook, being dissatisfied, has appealed to this court.

Before we discuss the errors alleged, we shall briefly review the facts. Rickie Roberts was the mother of nine children, all of age at the time of her death. She was the owner of 158 acres of land in the southwestern part of Marshall county, upon which she lived. Floyd Roberts was her youngest son. He operated the farm for his mother. Later he married, but the mother continued to live with Floyd up until the time of her death, which was caused by injuries she received in a tornado which destroyed or damaged practically all of the buildings on the farm.

It is the claim of the appellant that Milton Wright, a man of about the age of 30 years and who had been employed as a dairyman around Newton, became acquainted with Rickie Roberts in the year 1932. The acquaintanceship was due to the fact that he was a friend of Floyd Roberts. He visited at the Roberts home occasionally, not to see Rickie Roberts, but to see Floyd and his wife. On the evening of April 20, 1937, according to the story of Milton Wright, he went to the Roberts home to see Floyd. This was after the dinner hour. Floyd left the

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.W.2d 161, 231 Iowa 1088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-roberts-iowa-1942.