Larry Lincoln, John Lincoln, Lincoln Brothers Farms v. Gerald Lincoln and Maxine Lincoln

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 21, 2018
Docket17-0896
StatusPublished

This text of Larry Lincoln, John Lincoln, Lincoln Brothers Farms v. Gerald Lincoln and Maxine Lincoln (Larry Lincoln, John Lincoln, Lincoln Brothers Farms v. Gerald Lincoln and Maxine Lincoln) 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
Larry Lincoln, John Lincoln, Lincoln Brothers Farms v. Gerald Lincoln and Maxine Lincoln, (iowactapp 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-0896 Filed February 21, 2018

LARRY LINCOLN, JOHN LINCOLN, LINCOLN BROTHERS FARMS, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

GERALD LINCOLN and MAXINE LINCOLN, Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Delaware County, Monica L. Ackley,

Judge.

Two brothers appeal from a settlement enforcement order dividing a farm

partnership with a third brother. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Erik W. Fern of Putnam, Fern & Thompson Law Office, P.L.L.C., Decorah,

for appellant.

Michael J. Lanigan of Law Office of Michael Lanigan, Waterloo, for appellee.

Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Potterfield and McDonald, JJ. 2

POTTERFIELD, Judge.

John Lincoln and Larry Lincoln (“John and Larry”), appeal from a district

court order for enforcement of settlement as to the division of a 160 acre parcel of

land. John and Larry, along with their brother Gerald Lincoln and his wife Maxine

Lincoln (“Gerald and Maxine”), operated Lincoln Farms Partnership; this action

involves the division of that partnership. John and Larry appeal the district court’s

settlement enforcement order, claiming the court improperly awarded Gerald and

Maxine one hundred acres of a 160-acre parcel of land.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

This dispute arose from the division of a farm partnership following a civil

lawsuit between the parties.1 Here, the parties dispute division of 160 acres of the

total farm. The parties mediated the issues and reached a settlement agreement

in April 2016. As to the division of the land, the hand-written Memorandum of

Settlement states, “All land shall be partitioned as attached hereto.” Attached to

the Memorandum of Settlement was an aerial photo of land with certain parcels

divided and the words, “Land [within] green lines to go to [Gerald] . . . final

boundaries to be determined by agreement and survey.” John and Larry had a

surveyor parcel out ninety acres of the 160 acre parcel; Gerald and Maxine refused

to accept those particular ninety acres within the larger parcel, claiming that

1JOHN LINCOLN, Case No. CVCV007801 LARRY LINCOLN, and LINCOLN BROTHERS FARMS Plaintiffs,

vs. PETITION FOR DISSOCIATION; GERALD LINCOLN DERIVATIVE ACTION AND Defendant. PETITION AT LAW 3

mediation did not reach a final conclusion on the division of this particular 160-acre

parcel and that the ninety acres surveyed do not meet the parties’ understanding

of the agreement.

John and Larry filed an application to enforce the settlement agreement in

June 2016. In that application, they offered an additional ten acres as an incentive

for Gerald and Maxine to accept their surveyor’s description and avoid litigation.

In their motion to enforce settlement, John and Larry state, “[I]n the spirit of good

faith, [John and Larry] will consent to the additional ten acres and provide one

hundred acres to Gerald [and Maxine].” Gerald and Maxine resisted the motion to

enforce settlement. In response to Gerald and Maxine’s resistance, John and

Larry revoked their offer, stating, “[I]n the prior application, [John and Larry] in good

faith requested to provide one hundred acres to [Gerald and Maxine] in the spirit

of compromise; [John and Larry] withdraw said offer and expressly request the

Court award ninety acres pursuant to the Memorandum of Settlement.”

The district court, in awarding Gerald one hundred acres in the order on the

motion to enforce settlement, discussed its use of settlement negotiations as

extrinsic evidence and referenced the offer of an additional ten acres by John and

Larry:

If [John and Larry] continue to desire to provide the additional ten acres that they had agreed to to suffice [Gerald] that he would be receiving slightly more acreage than the other two brothers, [the surveyor] shall move the boundary line to accommodate the award of 10 additional acres. 4

The court then included in its order that the additional ten acres be awarded to

Gerald.2 John and Larry filed a motion for clarification regarding the ten acres.

The court confirmed its award of one hundred acres:

Although the court recognizes that the Plaintiffs may have withdrawn their desire to concede the 10 acres to try to settle the matter before litigation, the Court includes this as part of the negotiations that were entered into with the parties at the time of the discussions with [the mediator].

John and Larry appeal, arguing there are no facts in the record which

support the court’s award of one hundred acres to Gerald and Maxine. Gerald and

Maxine resist the appeal but contend there was no agreement as to the division of

this parcel of land.

II. Standard of Review

In a law action tried to the court, we review the district court’s decision for

correction of errors at law. Wolf v. Wolf, 690 N.W.2d 887, 892 (Iowa 2005). The

district court’s findings are binding when supported by substantial evidence. Id.

“Evidence is substantial if reasonable minds would accept it as adequate to reach

a conclusion.” Schlegel v. Ottumwa Courier, 585 N.W.2d 217, 221 (Iowa 1998).

“In determining whether substantial evidence exists, we view the evidence in the

light most favorable to the district court’s judgment.” Chrysler Fin. Co. v.

Bergstrom, 703 N.W.2d 415, 418 (Iowa 2005).

2 The court later used less permissive language in ordering the division, “[T]he parties shall comply fully with all of the terms set forth therein inclusive of the instruction that the surveyor move the boundary line to include 10 additional acres in the platting awarded to . . . Gerald Lincoln.” 5

III. Discussion

The settlement agreement recognized that the boundaries of the various

parcels would have to be established by survey and agreement of the brothers.

The map attached as the terms of the agreement as to partition includes different

portions highlighted or outlined in black pen, with the words, “Land [within] green

lines to go to [Gerald] . . . final boundaries to be determined by agreement and

survey.” The map contains several sets of numbers labeling different parcels, and

the boundaries of the 160-acre parcel are not clear.

John and Larry maintain the parties agreed ninety acres would go to Gerald

and Maxine; they claim the map used to divide up the property references ninety

acres three times. The offer of an additional ten acres was made separately from

the settlement agreement, in John and Larry’s motion to enforce settlement.3

There is no evidence to suggest John and Larry believed the agreement

reached during mediation was for one hundred acres of this parcel, and Gerald

and Maxine argue the settlement did not resolve the number of acres each party

would receive and the boundaries for each parcel. They argue:

The essential understanding of the parties at mediation was that the real estate was to be divided between John, [Gerald] and Larry Lincoln in parcels that were more or less equal in value. . . . [T]he focus was less on the number of acres being partitioned and more on the value of those acres.

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Larry Lincoln, John Lincoln, Lincoln Brothers Farms v. Gerald Lincoln and Maxine Lincoln, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larry-lincoln-john-lincoln-lincoln-brothers-farms-v-gerald-lincoln-and-iowactapp-2018.