Lawson v. Boo

287 N.W. 282, 227 Iowa 100
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 1, 1939
DocketNo. 44774.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 287 N.W. 282 (Lawson v. Boo) 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
Lawson v. Boo, 287 N.W. 282, 227 Iowa 100 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Richards, J.

On January 19, 1938, plaintiff signed and acknowledged a warranty deed which purported to convey to 6 grantees, defendants herein, a quarter section of land in Page county, subject to a reservation in the premises of “an absolute life interest” during plaintiff’s natural lifetime. On the same date plaintiff filed the deed for record in the office of the recorder of Page county, and it was duly recorded. A few days later the deed was handed over to plaintiff by the recorder. To set aside this deed the instant suit was commenced on February 24, 1938. As grounds for the relief sought plaintiff alleged that the deed was procured through fraud and undue influence, was without consideration, and was never delivered nor intended to be delivered. The cause was tried on the merits. In the decree that ensued the district court held that plaintiff had not proven fraud or undue influence. Reading the record, we are of like opinion. But upon the contention that there had been no delivery of the deed the trial court held with plaintiff, and entered a decree that the instrument be cancelled and annulled. Defendants, having appealed, urge there was an effective delivery. The salient features of the evidence bearing on that question appear to be the following:

Plaintiff’s age was 73 years. No children had ever been born to him. Marrying in 1894 he became a widower in 1923. In 1925 he married Mary Elriek, a widow, who had 6 children then living, all adults. These children are the persons named as grantees in the deed. Mary Elriek died in 1937. Following plaintiff’s marriage with her in 1925 the relations between him and her 6 children were cooperative and congenial. Their manner of associating and the frequent contacts between them were not unlike what is ordinarily observed between natural parents and children. In 1937 plaintiff voluntarily relinquished to the 6 children his distributive share in the estate of their mother. *102 This type of relationship between plaintiff and the children continued without interruption up to a time briefly subsequent to January 19, 1938. Nor from the record does it appear that even the instant suit has snuffed out all feeling of kindliness between these litigants. Plaintiff’s health had become seriously impaired prior to the making of the deed. He was a sufferer from high blood pressure, inflammation of the heart muscle, and an interference with the blood supply through the coronary arteries to the heart. As severe attacks came on from time to time he had been under his physician’s care. The date of one of these occurrences was January 10, 1938. Plaintiff’s malady was such that he was convinced his demise in the near future was quite probable. He admits that that realization was one at least of the things that moved him to malee the deed. In his testimony is a statement he did iiot think he would live over 12 hours when he signed the deed.

On January 19, 1938, plaintiff came from his farm to Clar-inda with Grace Boo, now one of the defendant grantees, and with Victor Boo, her husband. After parking the car, plaintiff and Victor entered a nearby abstract office. There plaintiff directed the abstracter to draft the deed that is now before us. Pursuant to these directions, including a reserving of the life interest, the deed was drawn. It was then signed and duly acknowledged. Plaintiff was unable to read or write. He signed the deed by making his mark. But he heard the dictating of the deed to a stenographer and heard the deed read after it was drafted, and on the trial admitted that it was properly drawn, and in the manner he had directed. With the deed in plaintiff’s possession he left the abstracter’s office with Victor Boo. Plaintiff returned alone to the abstract office in a very few minutes, and according to his testimony asked the abstracter, “Ed, does this have to be recorded?”, to which the abstracter answered “No”. The abstracter’s testimony is that plaintiff asked whether he (plaintiff) should or should not have the deed recorded, or that in substance, and that he, the abstracter, answered plaintiff that it was up to plaintiff solely. Plaintiff then departed, alone. Not long afterwards he and Grace Boo entered the office of the county recorder. Plaintiff was carrying the deed. He laid it down on the desk. Grace Boo picked it up, glanced at it, and laid it down. Then the recorder took *103 tbe deed to determine tbe recording fee, and after looking at tbe deed stated tbe amount would be 75 cents. Grace Boo paid tbe 75 cents to tbe recorder and tbe deed was accepted for recording. There is tbe further testimony of tbe county recorder that during these transactions in her office she asked Grace Boo whether she wanted tbe deed returned to her, whereupon plaintiff and Grace Boo looked at each other, and plaintiff said,“well, that will be alright,” and she (Grace Boo) said, “why don’t you take it and put it with tbe rest of tbe papers.” Tbe only contradiction of tbe recorder’s testimony is plaintiff’s statement as a witness that tbe recorder “said to me who is to have tbe deed, and I says, myself. ’ ’ On tbe evening of tbe same day, at bis home on tbe quarter section described in tbe deed, plaintiff was host to Mrs. Boo and two o.ther grantees, as well as to other persons, at an oyster supper, and informed those present concerning tbe deed be bad made, and asked them whether they would take care of him in case of illness, to which they replied they would. On January 26, 1938, plaintiff married a third time, tbe bride being a lady plaintiff’s acquaintance with whom bad originated a month before tbe wedding. On tbe day following this marriage plaintiff repaired to tbe office of bis attorneys to take steps to recover title to tbe quarter section.

In endeavoring to find in tbe foregoing tbe solution of tbe question whether there Avas an effectual delivery, one that transferred tbe title, it may well be noted at the outset that plaintiff filed tbe deed for record. That fact distinguishes tbe case from Orris v. Whipple, 224 Iowa 1157, 280 N W. 617, wherein there was no semblance of any delivering in tbe sense of passing tbe possession of tbe deed, either actually or symbolically. In tbe instant case tbe filing of tbe deed for record was a performance on part of plaintiff that is susceptible of being deemed an act of delivering such as was fatally lacking in the Orris case. For if tbe deed, after being signed and acknowledged by plaintiff, was placed on record by him with tbe intention of making tbe recording stand for a delivery, it is clear that tbe title would pass to tbe grantees, assuming there was acceptance by them of tbe title. Robinson v. Gould, 26 Iowa 89. In more recent cases it has been held that from tbe recording of a deed there follows a presumption that there was *104 an effective delivery. We bave further held that this presumption can be overcome only by clear and satisfactory evidence. Tutt v. Smith, 201 Iowa 107, 204 N.W. 294, 48 A. L. R. 394; Burch v. Nicholson, 157 Iowa 502, 137 N. W. 1066. The filing for record having been plaintiff’s own act, it seems clear that the presumption obtains in the instant case.

In a delivery that effects a transfer of title there is of course involved more than the passing of the instrument from grantor to grantee, actually and physically, or in some symbolical or substituted manner that the law approves.

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Bluebook (online)
287 N.W. 282, 227 Iowa 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-boo-iowa-1939.