In Re Estate of Shinn

222 N.W. 569, 207 Iowa 103
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 222 N.W. 569 (In Re Estate of Shinn) 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 Shinn, 222 N.W. 569, 207 Iowa 103 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Wagner, J. —

John W. McVey, the father of Elizabeth J. Shinn, deceased, and the grandfather of the plaintiffs herein, died testate, March 28, 1904. By the provisions of his will, he devised all of his property to his five children, to wit: Elizabeth J. Shinn, Mary A. Norton, John A. McVey, Rosanna McVey, and Charles McVey. John A. McVey was the father of the plaintiffs herein. Charles McVey predeceased his father, and by the terms of the will, that portion of the estate devised to said son passed in equal shares to his brother and three sisters. Whether that portion of the estate devised by John W. McVey to *104 Elizabeth J. Shinn constituted an estate in fee, or a life estate only, with remainder to her sisters and brother, seems to have been a matter of doubt in the minds of the interested parties; and on November 5, 1904, she and her sister, Mary A. Norton, and her brother, John A. McVey, joined in an action against the remaining daughter, Rosanna McVey, and the executor of the estate, and in their petition asked for such construction of the will of their father as to give to Elizabeth J. Shinn an estate in fee simple therein. Because of the doubt as to the proper construction of the will, the executor of said estate, by separate instrument, also asked for a construction thereof, and for instructions as to how, and to whom, distribution of the proceeds remaining in his hands after the payment of the debts and charges of said estate should be made. Upon trial, the court, on November 23, 1904, decreed that the interest of Elizabeth J. Shinn in that portion of the estate devised to her by her father was an absolute fee-simple estate. Since her brother Charles McVey had predeceased his father, she was by the’ decree held to be the owner of one fourth of the personal property absolutely, and of an undivided one fourth of the real estate in’ fee simple.

Elizabeth J. Shinn died testate, November 4, 1925, and her husband, O. H. Shinn, died February 23, 1919. At the time of the death of Elizabeth J. Shinn, she left no surviving husband or issue. By her last will and testament, she devised one third of her estate to her husband, O. H. Shinn, during the term of his natural life, the same to be in lieu of his distributive share of her estate, and provided that, upon his death, .said one third should go to the same parties and in the same proportions as the remaining two thirds of her estate thereinafter disposed of. By the.subsequent provisions of her will, she devised one third of her property to her sister Mary A. Norton, and one third in equal shares to the children of her sister Mary A. Norton (eight.in number), and the children of her brother John A. McVey (the .two plaintiffs herein). Rosanna McVey died a few days after the death of her sister Elizabeth J. Shinn. John A. McVey predeceased his. sister'Elizabeth J. Shinn.

The plaintiffs constitute the sole issue of John A. McVey, deceased, and they allege in their petition, in substance, that an oral.contract was entered into between their father and Elizabeth J. Shinn, whereby* in consideration of the said John A. McVey’s *105 not resisting her application to have the will of John W. McVey construed so as to give her her share in said estate in fee simple, she agreed to will the property owned by her, at the time of her death, so that the children of John W. McVey would receive all of the property left by the said Elizabeth J. Shinn, in equal shares, or the children by right of representation; and that the said John A. McVey carried out his part of said contract by joining with the said Elizabeth J. Shinn in making application to have the said will so construed; and that the same was so construed by the court.

The defendant in his answer alleges various defenses, among which are a general denial, want of consideration, estoppel, and that the contract is unjust and inequitable.

If Mrs. Shinn had made a will in accordance with the alleged oral contract, the interest of the plaintiffs would be greater than under the will which was probated. We first inquire as to whether or not the alleged oral contract relied upon by the appellants has been established.

Since the appellants are asking for specific performance of an alleged oral contract, the burden is upon them to establish the contract as alleged, and the same must be established by clear, satisfactory, and convincing evidence. Lockie v. Baker, 206 Iowa 21. And the terms of the contract must be so certain and definite as to leave nothing to conjecture, or to be supplied by the court. Marti v. Ludeking, 193 Iowa 500; Lockie v. Baker, supra.

Since the lips of the party against whom the contract is sought to be enforced are sealed by death, the case belongs to a class wherein the evidence in support of the alleged contract should receive the court’s closest scrutiny. As is well said in Garman v. Wettengel, 199 Iowa 1150:

“This case belongs to a class which usually challenges the scrutiny and the skepticism of the court. The evidence upon which such a case usually rests is such, in its very nature, that direct disproof is quite impossible. The defendants must rely largely upon circumstances of inconsistency and improbability. Such case imposes upon the court the special duty of receiving the direct testimony relied upon by plaintiff, subject to every fair test which tends to weaken its credibility.”

*106 In Houlette v. Johnson, 205 Iowa 687, being an action in which specific performance of an oral contract was asked after the death of the party against whose estate relief was sought, we said:

“Consistent with the seriousness of the situation, and in realization of the injustice that might otherwise be done, proof required must be ‘clear, convincing, and satisfactory,’ and the ‘acts said to constitute performance should be equally’ plain, ‘definite, and referable exclusively to said contract.’ ”

In Ross v. Ross, 148 Iowa 729, we said:

“The questions involved are almost wholly, if not entirely, questions of fact. * * * As the alleged vendor is dead, and cannot give his version of the matter, it is a wholesome rule of law that the testimony to sustain, such a contract as is relied upon here must be clear, satisfactory, and convincing.”

For other cases holding in conformity with the foregoing, see Holmes v. Connable, 111 Iowa 298; Groh v. Miller, 196 Iowa 1367; Stennett v. Stennett, 174 Iowa 431; In re Estate of Rich, 199 Iowa 902; Helmers v. Brand, 203 Iowa 587; Hart v. Hart, 181 Iowa 527.

. With the foregoing rules announced, we turn to the evidence in the case, to determine whether the plaintiffs have established, by the quantum of proof required, the alleged oral contract. The testimony relied upon by the plaintiffs is that of their uncle and their mother, who claim that, sometime after the death of J. W. McVey, they overheard a conversation at the home of Elizabeth J. Shinn, between her and John A. McVey, the father of the appellants. Both witnesses testified, on direct examination, that the husband of Mrs. Shinn was present at the time of the conversation.

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222 N.W. 569, 207 Iowa 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-shinn-iowa-1928.