Knight v. Anderson

292 N.W.2d 411, 1980 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 852
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 21, 1980
Docket63579
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 292 N.W.2d 411 (Knight v. Anderson) 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
Knight v. Anderson, 292 N.W.2d 411, 1980 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 852 (iowa 1980).

Opinion

McGIVERIN, Justice.

Claimants Jerry Knight and Vicki Knight, husband and wife, filed a claim in the estate of Jerry’s great-uncle, Dean Jacobs, asserting the decedent had made an oral contract to leave them, with all taxes paid, an 820-acre farm and attendant personal property upon the uncle’s death, and also to cancel all outstanding debts between decedent and themselves. The trial court awarded claimants the personal property and the cancellation of debts, but declined to award them the farm and made no ruling in relation to taxes. Claimants appeal from that part of the order declining to award them the farm. The estate administrator cross-appeals from that portion of the order awarding claimants the personal property. We affirm as to the personal property awards, and reverse and remand for further consideration as to the real estate claim and the “tax free” issue.

We must determine the following issues in our review:

1. Whether the court erred in overruling the estate’s motion to dismiss based on the claimants’ failure to comply with the provisions of sections 633.418 and 633.410, The Code;

2. Whether there was sufficient evidence to support that part of the court’s order awarding the personal property and cancellation of debts to claimants;

3. Whether the court erred in its conclusion of law concerning evidence of the alleged oral contract for transfer of the land as it would bear on a partial performance exception to the statute of frauds; and

4. Whether the court erred in not specifying whether claimants should receive the awarded property from the estate “tax free.”

I. Scope of review. Although claimants seek specific performance of an alleged oral- contract to convey property, they filed a claim in probate. The case was tried in probate to the court as a law action under section 633.33, The Code. Neither party objected to that procedure. See §§ 611.1-.10. Therefore, any error as to the forum is waived. § 611.12. We review this case for correction of errors at law, even though actions requesting specific performance of a contract are generally tried in equity. Iowa R.App.P. 4; § 633.33.

II. The timely filing of the claim. Dean Jacobs died intestate on January 26, 1978. A prior will, which did not mention the Knights, had been revoked by him. He *413 never married or had children. His estate was opened and the second date of publication of notice to creditors was February 9, 1978.

On February 7 the Knights’ claim was filed in his estate and stated that claimants sought “delivery of possession of title to, all real estate owned by the decedent in Lotts Creek Township, Ringgold County, Iowa, and for delivery of all personal property located or used in the farming of this real estate, all of the above being transferred with all taxes paid and subject to no debts, and for cancellation of all notes and debts outstanding between Dean Jacobs, Deceased and claimants.”

Gladys A. Anderson, as administratrix of the estate, on September 25 moved to dismiss the claim on the ground that claimants failed to comply with the requirements of section 633.418, The Code, 1 in that the claim did not state “the nature” of the claim or the obligation of the estate; and in the alternative moved for a more specific statement. The motion to dismiss was overruled and the estate’s alternative motion for more specific statement was sustained.

On October 27, pursuant to the court’s order, the Knights made their claim more specific and alleged as the basis of their claim an oral agreement made with Dean Jacobs in the fall of 1975. Claimants further stated, in substance, that their claim was based on the following particulars: If Jerry and Vicki would move onto the farm in question and operate the farm under decedent’s control, decedent would finance the operation and would so arrange his affairs that on his death all of Jerry and Vicki’s debts to him would be canceled, and

the farm, and the personal property on it, would pass tax-free to Jerry and Vicki; that claimants performed their part of the contract and changed their position in reliance thereon; however, Jacobs died without providing for conveyance of the property to claimants under the agreement.

The estate then denied the claim and alleged it was not timely filed under section 633.410, The Code, 2 because it was not filed “within six months after the date of the second publication of the notice to creditors.” The court overruled this contention and concluded the claim was timely filed.

In its cross-appeal the estate contends that claimants did not comply with the requirements of sections 633.418 and .410, and the court erred in not dismissing the claim, even as amended. The estate argues as follows: The claimants’ filing on February 7, 1978, did not constitute a claim under section 633.418, because it did not state the nature of the claim; claimants’ more specific statement filed on October 27, which alleged in detail the oral contract, was the first claim filed in accordance with section 633.410, because it did state the nature of the claim; and therefore, the October 27 claim was not timely filed with the clerk of court under section 633.410, because that claim was filed more than six months after the second date of publication of notice to creditors.

Claimants respond that their filing on February 7 was a claim meeting the requirements of section 633.418 and, therefore, was timely; also, their more specific statement filed October 27 was not a departure from the original claim and related back to the date of the original filing. We *414 believe the claim, as amended on October 27, was timely filed on February 7.

This statement in Chariton National Bank v. Whicher, 163 Iowa 571, 579, 145 N.W. 299, 302 (1914), still applies today:

It is a matter of common observation to every court and practicing lawyer that these claims are almost universally stated in very general and informal terms, being often prepared without the aid of counsel, and no court thinks of applying thereto the strict and technical rules of the law of pleading as it is observed in ordinary court proceedings, and no amendment which is germane to a claim as originally stated, which does not destroy the substantial identity of the claim or substitute some other new or different subject of the claimant’s demand, will deprive him of the advantage of his original filing.

See Hankins v. Young, 174 Iowa 383, 156 N.W. 380 (1916); accord, Bossen v. Hostetter, 243 Iowa 1241, 55 N.W.2d 281 (1952).

It is well established that “[i]f the statement of claim was not sufficiently specific, it would doubtless be subject to a motion for more specific statement.” Sullenbarger v. Ahrens, 168 Iowa 288, 292, 150 N.W. 71, 72 (1914).

As we said in Chariton National Bank:

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Bluebook (online)
292 N.W.2d 411, 1980 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-anderson-iowa-1980.