Leach v. Edgerton

211 N.W. 538, 203 Iowa 512
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 211 N.W. 538 (Leach v. Edgerton) 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
Leach v. Edgerton, 211 N.W. 538, 203 Iowa 512 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

Morling, J.

Under date of May 17,1924, J. Glenn Edger-ton (-whom-we will refer to as “Glenn”) signed a deed to his mother, Victoria I. Edgérton Bell' (formerly Estes, formerly Edgerton), for 160 acres of land in Fremont County. He gave the deed to the recorder the same day, and, after recording, it was sent to the grantee in Arkansas, where she was living. This suit is to cancel' that conveyance, both for active and implied fraud. The status of the plaintiff as a creditor and the insolvency of Glenn are not questioned. The law of evidence in such cases is discussed in First Nat. Bank v. Hartsock, 202 Iowa 603. Only fact questions need be considered.

The consideration claimed consists of a promissory note, bearing -date July 15, 1916, -for $4,850.50, -three notes aggregating $18,000 (two for $5,000 :each and one for $8,000), bearing date January 5, 1922, and a fifth note, dated March' 1, 1923, for $1,000; all signed by Glenn and all payable to the mother. The bona fides of the last mentioned noté for $1,000 is not questionéd.

That the note for $4,850.50 is a fabrication we think is not open to serious controversy. This note and the two- $5,000 notes and the $8,000 note are on the blank form of the Atlas' Bank of Neligh, Nebráska. They all have the printed date line of “Neligh, Neb..'-.......;.......:.T92.-..-.” In the $4,850.50 note there is inserted "in the date line'between “Neligh, Neb.,” and “192...,” the date “July 15; 1916.” It will be' observed, therefore, that this note, though ostensibly dated July 15, 1916, is written on a blank form that was printed for the next (1920) decade, beginning nearly three and one-half years after the purported date. The mother testified that it was given at the time it was' dated.' There is no evidence that this bank in 1916 had' forms of notes printed for execution in 1920 and later years. *514 The defendants testified that all four of these notes (though not on the same occasion) were drawn by the payee’s brother, one P-ayne, who lived at Neligh, Nebraska. Payne was not a witness. The father of Glenn Edgerton died May 14, 1916. Payne was appointed administrator. Glenn testified, when first called, that the note was for a book account that he owed his mother.

“We were in the cattle and hog business together. I gave the note to Mr. Payne, as he was administrator of the estate.”

He says that the note was made by Payne at Neligh, and sent to him (Glenn) for signature. When called at the close of the case, Glenn testified that:

“The bulk of the note * * * was given for my buying a half interest in the stock with my father, and there were some little debts with him after that.”

•The .mother’s testimony is that .Glenn owed the estate $4,850.50, and that:

“It was.taken off of a book that Glenn had always kept their business in, — the business between him and his father.”

, • She testified that the book was burned; also that all the letters relating to the matters in controversy, which must have been numerous, were burned. The mother testified that she and Glenn and Payne were in Hamburg when the note was executed, but that she does not know how it came to be dated at Neligh, Nebraska; that Payne may have made the note out and brought it with him; that it was made out in July, 1916, but she doesn’t know when she got it; that it was after the estate was settled. In the estate proceedings, Payne inventoried an undivided half interest.in 203 hogs and pigs, two cows and two calves, stating the other half to be owned by Glenn. There is no evidence tending to show that these hogs, pigs, two cows, and two calves were any different from the ordinary farmer’s summer stock of hogs and pigs. That such half- interest would not be worth more than a fraction of $4,850 may be inferred-from the report later referred-to. The inventory was dated May 26, 1916. It lists- also cash in bank, a note given by a third party, and an interest in .hogs in Colorado, of which the other interest was owned by Paul Edgerton. The inventory lists no account as owed by Glenn. The only report is the.final one, which contains the items- January 12, 1917, profits on glen (Glenn?) cattle $584.85; February 24, 1917, proceeds on .hogs- $600; April 4, *515 1917, proceeds on hogs $83.37. The report shows sale also of corn and oats,-the total collections amounting to $1,556.72. It shows payments made by the administrator to a larger amount, and says that the administrator has paid the heirs their proportionate. share of the personal property, and' they have: reimbursed him for the excess paid out by him. The mother testified that she talked with her other son, Charlie, about what' Glenn owed the estate; that Charlie understood it. Charlie and his wife both testified that they knew nothing about Glenn's owing the estate. The note is not- payable to the administrator. It nowhere appears as belonging to the estate. This note, if 'in existence, and genuine, was due in July, 1921. In October, 1921, the mother (as is about to be related) came to Hamburg) to get Glenn to take her Colorado land, in order that she might pay her debts. If Glenn owed the $4,850.50'note, there was due on it over $6,000; but no' one claims that any reférencé to such a note was made in the transaction about the land, or that the mother tried to get her debts paid out of that. On the contrary, Glenn in the land deal admittedly borrowed of the bank a large sum with which to pay her debts, and was given ho 'credit on the note; and the amount admittedly paid by Glenn on his mother's debts was, as will be seen, in excess of the claimed'price of the land. Without further comment, it is sufficient to say that the evidence is convincing that the alleged debt never had; any existence. ‘ ' • ■ .

The consideration for the three notes aggregating1 $18,000’ is claimed to be the purchase price of 480' acres of Colorado land sold by the mother in the course of a transaction beginning in October, 1921. The mother had married Estes,' and was living' in Arkansas.’ ' 1 ’ ■ ' s ' ■

The 480 acres had been sold in 1919 to Barnes for $30,000. Barnes was to assume a $12,000 mortgage and pay $18,000, according to the terms of a trust deed and notes." The trust deed and notes, however, according to-Glenn, were never delivered to his mother, “for the reason' that the deal’was not completed.'’ Interest, taxes) and water rent were delinquent:'' The inother testified that, in October, 1921, she came’ from Arkansas tó Fremont County, and told the two boys, Charlie and Glenn, that:

“I come to deed over my 480 acres of-land to them, share' *516 and share alike, if they could handle it. They were to pay all my indebtedness, and give me their, notes for $9,0.00 apiece. ..I says, ‘You give me your notes for-$9,000 apiece, under the same contract that the Barnes deal was made.’ ” .

Charlie was in debt, and he wanted 200 acres that Glenn had in Colorado, so that he could turn it in on what he owed. The mother testified that she then said to Glenn:

■ “Well, now, you could fix it this way. I want to do the right thing by both of you boys. I will make a.deed to you for 240 acres, and .one to Charlie for 240.

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Bluebook (online)
211 N.W. 538, 203 Iowa 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leach-v-edgerton-iowa-1926.