Indra v. Wiggins

28 N.W.2d 485, 238 Iowa 728, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 416
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 29, 1947
DocketNo. 47001.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 28 N.W.2d 485 (Indra v. Wiggins) 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
Indra v. Wiggins, 28 N.W.2d 485, 238 Iowa 728, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 416 (iowa 1947).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

As tbe appeal is presented tbe chief complaint of tbe plaintiff against tbe decree of tbe court is that it charges her share in tbe joint property with one half of tbe enhanced value thereof, wbicb increase in value was found by tbe court to have resulted from improvements placed on tbe ground and paid for by the defendant J. H. Wiggins. Her contention is that, although she contributed nothing to any improvement placed on tbe bare acre of ground, the value of which *731 at all times pertinent was but $150, sbe is, nevertheless, entitled to one half of the value in excess thereof, all of which resulted from defendants’ improvements. On March 5, 1946, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wiggins sold this property by written contract for $8,250. By agreement of the parties the purchasers are to pay the purchase price to a referee appointed by the court as soon as an abstract showing good title and the referee’s deed are furnished. Plaintiff does not question that the enhanced value, as evidenced by the sale price, was due to the improvements. The able trial court found that the claim, so vigorously pressed by the plaintiff, “as a matter of equity and fairness * * * entirely lacks foundation.” We agree fully in this finding and conclusion.

Louise M. Indra, a maiden of twenty-eight years, and James H. Wiggins, a boy of about twenty, were married in 1938. She had been working in Cedar Rapids, and he was living with his parents on a farm about two miles north of Marion, in Linn county. For two or more years they lived in an apartment in Marion. No issue was born to them and they adopted a little boy. They desired a home of their own. Louise had saved about $1,000 from her premarriage earnings, and sometime after the marriage her father, John F. Indra, gave her $1,000. The father of James owned a forty-acre timber pasture just across the road from his parental home. On June 17, 1941, the parents of James went to a lawyer in Cedar Rapids and executed a warranty deed, there prepared, conveying to J. H. Wiggins and Louise M. Wiggins, husband and wife, as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, with right of survivor-ship, an acre of ground out of said forty-acre tract. The recited consideration was $1 -and other valuable consideration. The lawyer had the deed recorded and then placed it in an envelope and mailed it or handed it to James. He paid little attention to the deed and thought it conveyed title to himself only. He took it directly to the building and loan association without knowing or understanding that the deed was to him and his wife as ■joint tenants. He never knew this until he was so informed by a letter he received from plaintiff’s attorney herein on September 22, 1944, Louise never had seen the deed,

*732 Sometime after receiving the deed from the scrivener, James negotiated a loan of $2,000 with the Linn Connty Building and Loan Association of Marion, and he and Louise executed their note therefor, and secured its payment by their mortgage on the acre of ground. The date of this does not appear. He entered into a contract with a builder for the construction of the house. From her savings before marriage she contributed toward the building $1,900. The contract price was $4,075, but, as usually happens, there were extras and the cost overran the contract price. The contractor had not allowed for a stairway to the second story and the extra cost therefor was between three and four hundred dollars. James dug the basement and a trench for about three hundred feet for piping water. He also dug a sewer ditch from the house to the toilet, a distance of about one hundred fifty feet. He painted the house outside' and inside and finished the floors. The house was built of the best material and modern in every way. There was a full basement and two floors above. The house was heated with a furnace and lighted with electricity. Some of the rooms in the second story were not fully finished. This was also true of the basement. The improvements at that time fairly represented an outlay in money and his labor approximating $5,000. The home was comfortably furnished. From his earnings he had reduced the mortgage to about $1,400. What his work was does not appear, except his name on a letterhead indicates his association with another in the dairy business.

But marital discord entered the home. What its, cause was and when it arose is not disclosed in the record. They talked together about divorce. He consulted Charles J. Haas, a lawyer of Marion, formerly on the bench of the Eighteenth Judicial District of Iowa, whom the trial court spoke of as “a highly skilled and meticulous lawyer,” She talked with a friend, but whether he was a lawyer does not appear. She employed, no lawyer but consulted four or five times with Judge Haas. Usually one or both of her married sisters or her father was present at these conferences, and once or twice her husband was present. She brought to Judge Haas a written itemized *733 statement showing the furniture and household furnishings which she wished. Apparently she received a fair share thereof. In this statement were the items: “Louise’s cash investment in house,” and “$500 cash settlement.” The matter of the house and lot was never discussed at these conferences, because Judge Haas had asked James about the title and he had told him the deed was to him. Louise never told the judge anything different, and when he prepared the property settlement stipulation, and the divorce decree, no mention was made of the real estate. James H. Wiggins was the plaintiff in the suit. Louise signed a written appearance and waiver of notice and time of hearing. The stipulation, signed by both parties on February 21, 1944, stated: “* * * the property rights of the parties and the custody of the adopted child * * * [are] hereby settled and agreed upon as follows * * *.” It provided that within ten days after decree James was to pay $2,403, “in full of all claims for alimony, money advanced, and for any and all claims of whatsoever kind and character that the said Louise has or claims to have against the said James.” The personal property was listed. The custody of the adopted boy was given to James. Judge Haas testified that the $2,403 was made up of the $500 cash alimony item and $1,903 was to reimburse Louise for the money she had furnished toward the house-building expense. The judge also testified that before drawing the stipulation he asked Louise if it was to settle everything and all matters that were between them, and she replied that it did. He told her that James had no ready money and could raise the $2,403 to pay her only by placing a mortgage on the residence, and that it would be better if the decree of divorce was first procured, and then she would not have to sign the mortgage papers and James could execute the mortgage on the house and lot, which would require about ten days. Louise agreed to this and never mentioned anything about her having an interest in the home. She testified that she never knew that her name was in the deed or that she had any interest in the property. The decree of divorce was rendered on March 17, 1944. It decreed that James H. Wiggins had established the' allegations of his petition and was entitled to the divorce. *734 The stipulation was made a part of the decree by reference. The decree recited that:

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.W.2d 485, 238 Iowa 728, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indra-v-wiggins-iowa-1947.