In Re Estate of Smith

36 N.W.2d 815, 240 Iowa 499, 8 A.L.R. 2d 640, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 355
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 5, 1949
DocketNo. 47361.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 36 N.W.2d 815 (In Re Estate of Smith) 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 Smith, 36 N.W.2d 815, 240 Iowa 499, 8 A.L.R. 2d 640, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 355 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

— Louisa Smith died intestate April 15, 1946, leaving no spouse, but survived by her daughter, Grace Conklin, and seven minor children of a deceased daughter, Gertrude Liechti. Bernice L. Kuhn, age thirty-three, the claimant, a daughter of a deceased sister of the intestate, lived in the home of the latter for approximately eighteen years — from the time she was about ten years old until 1943. Their relations at all times were very close and congenial. Claimant was about the same age as the daughter, Grace. The property which claimant received from the estate of her mother was largely invested in Home Owners Loan Corporation bonds by her guardian. Upon the discharge of her guardian in 1935, when she was twenty-one years old, she received these bonds.

Fred Smith, husband of Louisa, had preceded her in death several years, leaving her about nine hundred acres of land near Sigourney, apparently of mediocre quality and heavily encumbered, except eighty acres. In 1936, the insurance company holding the mortgage conditioned its renewal upon a reduction of the principal. Louisa asked Anna Smith, mother of her deceased husband, for a loan of $4000, which sum the mother-in-law told her she did not have available. Claimant, who overheard this talk, then told her banker, at Sigourney on September 17, 1936, to sell enough of her HOLC bonds to procure $4000. When the bond money of $4180 came in, the banker put it into a demand certificate of deposit payable to claimant. On October 5, 1936, claimant and Louisa came to the bank and claimant endorsed the certificate and gave it to the banker, who deposited it in the checking account of Louisa Smith. This deposit of $4180 together with an additional deposit by Louisa, and a small balance in her account, was sufficient to pay a cheek of $4569.24, which Louisa had drawn thereon and sent to the mortgagee. For some unaccountable reason no note or *502 written evidence of this loan or debt was given by Louisa to claimant.

Louisa did much of her banking at Hayesville. She and claimant usually came to the bank together. Her liability account at this bank showed that, commencing on October 4, 1937, when Louisa borrowed $1000, through each year to the last note on September 30, 1942, due January 2, 1943, she had given nine other notes to the bank, aggregating several thousand dollars. Claimant had endorsed each of these notes and had also pledged as collateral security one or more of her HOLC bonds. The banker testified that from their conversation and the fact that each at times gave money to the other, it appeared to him there had been mutual accommodations between them in money matters. All of the note obligations to the bank, above noted, were later satisfied, and there was no evidence of like transactions subsequent to the note of September 30, 1942.

On September 16, 1946, claimant filed with the clerk of the district court her claim merely stating, “Money loaned $4000”, which she swore was “just, true and unpaid.”

On April 16, 1947, Edwin Willcoekson, as guardian of the Liechti minors, filed his verified application for an order, stating that his wards were grandchildren of Louisa Smith and inherited an undivided one-half interest in the real estate left by her; he was informed some invalid claims, which should not be allowed by the administrator, had been filed but not 'allowed; in order to determine from the face of the claims it will be necessary that any alleged invalid claims be made more specific as to dates, amounts, balance due and whether written or oral; the guardian should be permitted to intervene in said matter and in this estate and contest the allowance of any invalid or questionable claim; and the administrator be directed to disallow and contest any invalid claim. He prayed that the court fix a time for hearing on the application with notice thereof, and that orders be granted as prayed and such others as might be proper. The record does not disclose that any hearing was had or orders were made.

But, on April 24, 1947, claimant swore to and filed an amendment to her original claim, stating that on October 5, *503 1936, she - “loaned on temporary verbal arrangement to Louisa Smith, $4000 to- assist her in refinancing her farm mortgage with the Equitable Life Insurance Co. of New York”; that she was a niece of deceased and had lived in her home for eighteen years, and after October 5, 1936, they had owned an automobile together and she owned some furniture, including a refrigerator, in the Smith home; that each had borrowed small sums from each other and had frequently talked about having a settlement and reducing the difference to writing in the form of a note; that there was no interest ever figured or paid on the original $4000 loan, but just before the death of Louisa, the latter discussed the $4000 debt with her daughter, Grace Conklin, whom she told about the debt, and that she was going to make a note as soon as she felt a little better; and that Louisa had a relapse and died suddenly, owing a balance on the claim of more than $4000.

Claimant, being a party to this action and also interested in the event thereof was incompetent to testify, and was not permitted, under section 622.4, Code of 1946, to- testify to any of the matters alleged which were communications or personal transactions with deceased.

On April 26, 1947, the respective attorneys for the claimant, administrator and intervenors, in writing, agreed that: 1. The “disputed” claim for $4000, as amended, be that day brought on for trial, without a jury, to take the testimony of Grace Conklin, and that then the trial be adjourned to a later time; 2. “It is further stipulated and agreed that the guardian and guardian ad litem for the Liechti minors shall have the right to intervene and defend without objection from the claimant or the executor and shall be considered to have intervened and have made any and all general objections that he could make to said claim and may have the right to make any specific objections that he deems proper in connection with his duties as guardian ad litem at any time during the trial”; 3. “It is further stipulated and agreed that the executor and his attorney be considered as having made such objections to the claim as his duties as administrator require him to do- for his protection as administrator. This stipulation is subject to the approval of the court to be endorsed hereon.” What objections, referred *504 to in paragraph 3, supra, if any there were, “considered as having [been] made” by the administrator “for his protection” are not disclosed by the record before us. The stipulation was accepted and approved that day by Judge Yoder.

Directly after the agreement was executed and approved, Grace Conklin was examined as a witness for claimant. She testified to the relationships of herself and others to deceased as noted herein, and of claimant’s living in the latter’s home until 1943 when she bought and moved into her own home. Witness was married in 1932 and remained in her mother’s home until September 1936. She was familiar with her mother’s financial affairs, and of the demand of the mortgagee for some payment on the principal. She knew something of the financial dealings between her mother and claimant, but did not disclose their nature or extent. Her sister, Gertrude Liechti, died in March 1945, and thereafter her minor children, with ages from four to fifteen, lived in grandmother Smith’s home.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.W.2d 815, 240 Iowa 499, 8 A.L.R. 2d 640, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-smith-iowa-1949.