Kaufman v. Zimmer

287 N.W.2d 884, 1979 Iowa App. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedNovember 19, 1979
Docket2-61769
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 287 N.W.2d 884 (Kaufman v. Zimmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaufman v. Zimmer, 287 N.W.2d 884, 1979 Iowa App. LEXIS 44 (iowactapp 1979).

Opinion

CARTER, Judge.

Defendant, John Zimmer, Jr., appeals from trial court decree adjudging that he holds record title to a parcel of real estate in trust for the benefit of certain designated persons and ordering conveyance of same to those persons together with an award of damages. 1 Certain of the plaintiffs and intervenors cross-appeal urging that the trial court erred in determining the extent of their respective interests in the property. Because the action was docketed and tried in equity, our review is de novo. Iowa R.App.P. 4. With certain modifications hereafter discussed, we affirm the trial court’s decree.

This dispute involves the respective property interests of the parties in a 120-acre farm formerly owned by Mary Kaufman, deceased. Plaintiffs are four of the six children of August (Gus) Kaufman; inter-venors in the action include two other children of Gus Kaufman and the Estate of Mary Kaufman. Gus Kaufman and his children claim to be the beneficial owners of the property. The Estate of Mary Kaufman, who was Gus Kaufman’s mother, claims to be an assignee of Gus Kaufman’s interest in the subject property, whatever that may be.

On July 14,1958, Mary Kaufman entered into a written agreement with defendant John Zimmer, Jr., providing for the sale of this 120-acre tract to Zimmer for the sum of $22,600, payable in installments as provided in the agreement. It is undisputed that Zimmer made all of the contract payments to Mary Kaufman and on March 5, 1969, received a warranty deed to the property executed by Mary Kaufman, a single person.

The evidence offered at trial to establish the claim of plaintiffs and intervenors to the subject property included plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1, a written instrument which contained the following recitation and purported signatures:

I, John Zimmer Jr., hereby acknowledge that I am purchasing the 120 acres described as follows:
The East Half of the Northwest Quarter and the Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (E ½ NW ¼ & NE ¼ SW ¼) of Section 13, Township 80 N., Range 39 West of 5th P.M. Containing 120 Acres more or less,
from Mary Kaufman as trustee for her son and my brother-in-law, Gus Kaufman and his children. I further acknowledge that I will transfer the farm to Gus Kaufman or his children whenever they repay to me the sum of $22,600.00, less whatever I still owe to Mary Kaufman. I do not want to purchase the farm myself and agreed to do so to help Gus Kaufman out.
Signed at Harlan, Iowa this 29th day of February, 1960.
/s/ John Zimmer. Jr.
Witnesses:
/s/ Mrs. Marv Kaufman

John Zimmer, Jr., denied in his trial testimony that the signature on this exhibit was his. Mary Kaufman was deceased at the time of trial. While Zimmer admitted that he agreed orally with Mary Kaufman at the time of executing the July 14, 1958 agreement, that he would later “sell the farm back” to Gus Kaufman if the latter paid him for the farm, he insisted that his agreement in this regard required that he receive payment in two or three years following July 14, 1958, in order for Gus Kaufman to get title to the farm.

Gus Kaufman testified that he was present in an attorney’s office when Zim-mer agreed with his mother, Mary Kaufman, that Zimmer would take title to the farm and reconvey it to Gus and his children. This testimony was corroborated by *887 the testimony of Gus Kaufman’s former wife who claimed to have been present at this meeting and by the testimony of William Lewis, the attorney involved. William Lewis testified that this oral agreement between Mary Kaufman and Zimmer took place prior to the execution of the July 14, 1958 agreement. He further testified that he drafted plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1 to reflect the oral agreement between Mary Kaufman and John Zimmer, Jr., because he was anxious that some record be made of said agreement. He stated that he gave the instrument to Mary Kaufman and she indicated that she would take it to Zimmer for his signature. Attorney Lewis had no personal knowledge of whether the signature found on plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1 was in fact that of John Zimmer, Jr. Gus Kaufman, however, testified without objection that his mother had received a signed verification from Zimmer of the oral understanding between the parties. In addition, an expert witness testified that in his opinion the signature on plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1 and the signature contained on an exemplar of Zim-mer’s handwriting were made by the same person.

I. The first issue presented for our determination is whether the trial court was correct in finding that John Zimmer, Jr. executed plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1. Zimmer contends that the evidence does not support the trial court’s finding in this regard. We disagree. Upon our de novo review of the entire record, including the evidence detailed above, we conclude that the great weight of the evidence sustains the trial court’s finding that Zimmer’s signature on the document is genuine.

We further find that plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1 evidences the true agreement under which Mary Kaufman agreed to convey the real estate which is the subject of this dispute to Zimmer. The evidence strongly suggests that the oral conditions agreed to by Zimmer fixed the extent of the title which Zimmer acquired under the July 14, 1958 agreement. The warranty deed executed thereafter was only an incident of that contract and, as such, was subject to the prior limitation which the parties placed on Zimmer’s title. The written admission of Zimmer, as the intended grantee in the contract for conveyance from Mary Kaufman, is competent evidence to establish the limitations which exist upon his own title and to reveal the true state of the beneficial interests in the property conveyed. Ross v. Ross, 256 Iowa 326, 333, 126 N.W.2d 369, 374 (1964). 2

II. Defendant Zimmer next asserts that the transaction under which plaintiffs and intervenors claim is: (a) violative of the rule against perpetuities expressed in section 558.68, The Code; or (b) an unreasonable restraint on alienation. As the premise for such contention, Zimmer asserts the only agreement which can be sustained by the evidence is a contract vesting beneficial as well as record ownership in himself, subject only to an option in Gus Kaufman and his children to purchase the property. Because there is no requirement that this option be exercised within any particular period of time, Zimmer asserts that either or both of the aforesaid prohibitions serve to void the purported interest of Gus Kaufman and his children.

The validity of the foregoing contention depends in great measure upon the characterization placed upon the transaction between Mary Kaufman and Zimmer. If, as the trial court found, the conveyance to Zimmer was in trust for the use of Gus Kaufman and his children, the beneficial title was, at all times material, vested in the latter persons or class of persons. If this were the case, there could be no violation of the rule against perpetuities. Butler v. Butler,

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