Meredith v. Cockshoot

16 N.W.2d 221, 235 Iowa 213, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 492
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 14, 1944
DocketNo. 46580.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 N.W.2d 221 (Meredith v. Cockshoot) 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
Meredith v. Cockshoot, 16 N.W.2d 221, 235 Iowa 213, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 492 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Wennerstrum,’- J.

Plaintiff, the administrator with will annexed of the estate of Anna K. Meredith, deceased, brought a law action on a promissory note against the defendants. At the conclusion of all the testimony Thera Brown Cockshoot was dismissed as one of the defendants by the trial eourt on the ground that there had been a material alteration of tbe note after she signed it. Thereafter the cause-was submitted to the jury as to the liability of the remaining defendant, R. W. Cockshoot. The jury found for the defendant and the plaintiff has appealed from the judgment entered against him for costs.

The appellees in their original answer admit in substance *215 the execution of the note sued on. The appellee Thera Brown Cockshoot, in a separate answer, definitely pleaded and admitted the execution and delivery of the note, but further alleged the note was materially altered by the obliterating of a conditional payment clause on it after it was signed by her. The appellee R. W. Cockshoot also pleaded that there had been a material alteration of the note after he signed it. The court submitted instructions relative to this contention. These appellees further pleaded in an amendment to their answer that the $2,000 represented by the alleged note was, at the tithe of the making of said note on January 6, 1936, a gift inter vivos to the minor children of the appellees, namely, Ralph W. Cock-shoot, Jr. and Adele Brown Cockshoot, by reason of a contract as evidenced by a will claimed to have been executed on or about said date by Anna K. Meredith. It is further pleaded by the appellees that the note was delivered to Anna K. Meredith with the following words written on the face of it:

“Advancement as per paragraph 8 of will of Anna K. Meredith to be cancelled upon payment to guardian of Ralph W. Cockshoot, Jr., and Adele Brown Cockshoot of $2000.”

• It is further pleaded and alleged that R. "W. Cockshoot was appointed guardian of the property of the two, children, Ralph W. Cockshoot, Jr. and Adele Brown Cockshoot, and that R. W. Cockshoot paid the $2,000 referred to in the note to R. W. Cockshoot, guardian of appellees’ children, in compliance with the gift inter vivos made’ by Anna K. Meredith to the children heretofore mentioned. The appellees in their answer referred to and pleaded a portion of an alleged will of Anna K. Meredith, and particularly paragraph 8 of this will, which was as follows:

“Unto Ralph "W. Cockshoot, Jr., I do hereby will and bequeath the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000) in money, the same to be his absolute property forever. This bequest is made for his education. I do hereby will and bequeath the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000) in money to Adele Brown Cockshoot, the same to be her absolute property forever. This bequest is made for her education. I have advanced to Ralph W. Cockshoot, Sr., father of the two children named in this paragraph the two thousand dollars ($2,000) represented by *216 these two legacies which advancement is in the form of a note due and payable to me and which note draws interest at four per cent (4%) during my lifetime and which note will be can-celled by my executor upon the appointment of a guardian to receive these bequests.”

The facts as disclosed by the evidence show that Anna K. Meredith, prior to her death, lived at Atlantic, Iowa; that her husband, who predeceased her, was a lawyer; that at the time of the making of the note sued on she was about seventy years of age; that the appellee R. W. Cockshoot had lived in the home of Anna K. Meredith during two different periods prior to his marriage. There is testimony to the effect that shortly before January 6, 1936, there was a conversation between R. W. Cockshoot and Anna K. Meredith. Mrs. Cockshoot stated she was present but took no part in the conversation and testified, relative to this incident, over objections that she was incompetent as a witness, in part,-as follows:

“Mrs. Meredith said she was giving this money the same as she gave the money to the church; that she expected the interest to be paid during her lifetime, but there was no money to be paid back. ’ ’

The appellee R. W. Cockshoot testified that he drew the note sued on in this pending action and signed the same; that he wrote on this note the statement and reference to paragraph 8 of the will of Anna K. Meredith. He further testified that at the time he prepared the note sued on he drafted the claimed instrument which purports to be a copy of a former will made by Mrs. Meredith. He identified the copy of the will, over the objection that his testimony was a self-serving declaration and that the witness was incompetent under section 11257 of the 1939 Code, commonly referred to as the dead man statute.

The appellee R. W. Cockshoot also testified that the note sued on was a renewal note and a mortgage was given to secure it. He further testified that he had promised to pay it or to make payments on it. There were also admitted in evidence two letters written by R. W. Cockshoot, one to Mrs. Meredith, in which he made the statement:

*217 “However, there is one matter I would like to discuss with you, and that is the matter of your mortgage of $2,000.”

In this letter to Mrs. Meredith, It. W. Cockshoot suggested that the mortgage, which was security for the $2,000, be released and that a like amount in notes secured by a mortgage against a certain school building which he had purchased be substituted. In a letter to Owen F. Meredith, the appellee R. W. Cockshoot stated, in part: '

“As to the larger note I had promised Mrs. Meredith that when I got this larger loan I would pay her $300 on this note along with the interest to date. * * * I am writing this letter to let j'ou know I am making every effort that I can to make these payments and just as soon as I have a larger loan or can spare anything from the law business I will pay as I have indicated above. ’ ’

In connection with the claimed payment of the money to the guardian of the appellees’ children, R. W. Cockshoot testified:

“T was appointed guardian of the children myself_ and I have turned the money over to them and T have given them a. note and mortgage on my place over here which is worth about — what they have the mortgage on is worth about $10,000.”

A witness who testified for the appellees stated that sometime during the winter of 1935 or 1936 she was called to the Meredith home to witness a paper and that Mrs. Meredith stated that it was her last will and testament.

In connection with the statement alleged to have been written on the face of the note sued on, and which is referred to in appellees’ answer, the evidence shows that lines were drawn through the statement and a portion of it had been partially obliterated. The note in evidence discloses that underneath the typed part the following was written: “Erased-by R. W. Cockshoot.” This last statement was in handwriting. In the direct examination of Mi-. Cockshoot he was asked when the alteration that is shown on the note was made. To this inquiry lie answered: “Ido not know the date or even the year; but, m3' best judgment would be two or three years after it was *218

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.W.2d 221, 235 Iowa 213, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-v-cockshoot-iowa-1944.