Mahaffy v. Mahaffy

18 N.W. 685, 63 Iowa 55
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 19, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 18 N.W. 685 (Mahaffy v. Mahaffy) 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
Mahaffy v. Mahaffy, 18 N.W. 685, 63 Iowa 55 (iowa 1884).

Opinion

Reed, J.

1. PRACTICE in supreme court: suplemental abstract to present the record as corrected, after appeal, in the court below. I. The first question which we are required to determine is one of practice. The appellee filed an additional abstract, in which it is denied that the ante-nuptial contract, or any copy oi it, was attached to plaintiffs’ petition as an exhibit, or at any time made a part of the pleadings or records of the case in the district court, or that it was offered or inti’od-uoed. in evidenee on tlie trial; and it is claimed by appellee that it does not appear by the record, either that the execution of the contract was admitted in the pleadings, or that its execution or conditions were proved on the trial, and that,, in the absence of the contract, we cannot' consider or determine any of the questions arising in this case on its merits. If the case had been finally submitted on the abstract originally filed by appellant and the additional abstract filed by appellee,'this position would undoubtedly be correct. But, after the additional abstract was filed by appellee, appellants suggested a diminution of the record, and had leave to amend the same. After obtaining this leave, they appeared in the district court and filed a motion to correct the record and minutes of the evidence taken on the trial. Defendant’s counsel appeared to this motion, and, upon a hearing, the motion was sustained, and it was ordered that the record and minutes of the evidence be so. corrected as to show “that, on the trial of said cause, the plaintiff sought to find and introduce as evidence the original ante-nuptial contract referred to in the ¡headings, but, the same being mislaid and not being produced at the time, a copy of said ante-nuptial contract was found and produced by plaintiffs’ attorney, and the counsel for defendant consented that said copy might be used. instead of the ori[59]*59ginal; that, by mistake or inadvertence, this consent was not noted by the short-hand reporter on his minutes; that, after all the evidence was concluded, the said copy of the ante-nuptial contract was read to the court as part of the evidence, the counsel on both sides discussed and considered said contract, and what was its proper construction, and that, when the case was submitted, the court took said copy and considered it as part of the evidence in the ease, and the same was incorporated in full in the decree of the court, as shown by the record.”

At the next term of this court; after' this order was made in the district court, appellants filed an amended and supplemental abstract containing these proceedings; also, the judgment or decree of the district court, in which is incorporated what purports to be said ante-nuptial contract in full. Appellee now contends that we cannot consider this supplemental abstract-; that appellant, having averred that the original abstract was correct, and having filed the certificate of the judge who tried the case, and of the short-hand reporter, to its correctness, cannot now be heard to assert the contrary. The original abstract shows that the evidence introduced on the trial was taken down by the official. short-hand reporter of the court, and that his minutes or notes were at once filed with the clerk:” '

The statute, section 3777, McClain’s Code, makes these notes, when thus filed with the clerk, part of the record of the case, and we know of no reason why this record may not be amended or corrected by the court that made it, when it is ascertained in a proper proceeding that it does not fully or correctly embody the action or proceeding of which it was intended to be the record. It has been’ frequently held, it is true, that it is not competent to contradict the recitals in the bill of exceptions by affidavit, or by the certificate of the judge, as in Pearson v. Maxfield, 47 Iowa, 135, cited by appellee, and in Dedrio v. Hopson, 62 Id., 562. But the difference between the holding in those cases and the question [60]*60here presented is very apparent. There the offer was to contradict the recitals of the record by affidavit, or by the certificate of the judge. Here an additional record is presented, so amended and corrected by the proper court as that it embodies the action and proceedings which was had upon the trial. We think, therefore, that this supplemental abstract is properly before us as part of the record, and that the case must be determined on its merits.

2. ANTE-NUPTIAL contract: fraud in procuring: facts not constituting. II. Coming, then, to the merits of the case, the first question to be determined is whether this is a valid contract. It is not claimed by appellee that contracts of this character are not recognized by the law, or that they are not enforceable when they have been fairly entered into; but her claim is that, when she signed this contract, she did not know what rights or interest she would acquire by the marriage in the estate of her husband, and that she did not understand the force or effect of the instrument she signed. It is true that a court of equity will not enforce the specific performance of a contract against one who entered into the contract in ignorance of his rights as to any material matter involved in it; and this is specially true, if any undue advantage has been taken of his ignorance iii this respect.

In this case, howerer, we are not satisfied by the evidence that appellee was ignorant of her rights when she signed the contract, or that any advantage was taken of her. The evidence shows that William Mahafly was about sixty-nine years old when this contract was entered into; that he was an ordinarily well-to-do farmer, living on his farm, but having it cultivated either by hired help or by tenants; and that, for a number of years, he had been unable to do much work, being in delicate health and suffering from some disease of the heart. Appellee at this time was about thirty-three years old, and had been living for some time'in Mahaffy’s family as a domestic. She was almost illiterate; was poor and depended on her own earnings for support, having neither home nor [61]*61property, so far as the evidence ■ discloses. On the. day on which the contract was entered into, the parties went from Mahaffy’s farm to the city of Burlington, where they called at the office of the lawyer who prepared the contract. .Previous to this, Mahaffy had consulted this same attorney on the question whether a contract could be entered into between parties contemplating marriage, which would secure to the wife, after the death of the husband, a provision different from the interest which she would take in his estate under the statute, and he had been advised that such a contract would be valid. While in the office, and before the contract was signed, a controversy arose as to the amount of the provision which should be made for appellee by' the contract, and she insisted that Mahaffy had agreed that the amount should be one thousand dollars, while he claimed that six hundred dollars was all he could afford to pay her. She also made the objection that Mahaffy’s children might not be disposed to pay her the amount after his death, and the attorney advised her that the contract could be so drawn as that the amount would be a charge on the property of Mahaffy’s estate after his death, and that this would afford her ample security. And this controversy and negotiation resulted in an agreement on six hundred dollars as the amount which should be paid her, and in embodying in the contract a provision which makes the amount a charge on all the property of the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.W. 685, 63 Iowa 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahaffy-v-mahaffy-iowa-1884.