Merrifield v. Clark

201 N.W. 563, 199 Iowa 171
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 13, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 201 N.W. 563 (Merrifield v. Clark) 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
Merrifield v. Clark, 201 N.W. 563, 199 Iowa 171 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

De Graff, J. —

The plaintiff alleges that, in 1912, he acquired title to the land in controversy by virtue of an oral gift to him from the defendant; that the plaintiff is a nephew of the defendant, and has lived with him since early childhood, and worked on the land described; that, at the time of said alleged oral gift, the said defendant told the plaintiff that it was his land, and directed him to move upon and take possession of the land as soon as the then existing lease had expired, which would be in the spring of 1913; that plaintiff, pursuant to said oral gift, moved upon said land, in accordance with the directions of the defendant, and took possession thereof, placed valuable improvements thereon, used, occupied, and cultivated the land; and that he leased a part of said premises and collected the rent therefor, all with the knowledge, consent, and approval of the defendant; that, ever since said oral gift, the plaintiff has been in possession of the land; but that the defendant, during the temporary abseneé of the plaintiff, entered upon the premises and took forcible and unlawful possession thereof, ordered the tenants of the plaintiff to discontinue the cultivation of the land, and is now attempting to hold possession, as against the right of the plaintiff; that the defendant claims some title to the premises by reason of the fact that no written conveyance has been recorded, conveying the land to the plaintiff.

By way of answer and cross-petition, the defendants deny the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, except that they admit that plaintiff claims some interest in the land, and allege that the defendant Washington L. Clark is the absolute owner thereof; and defendants further allege that there has been an adjudication of the issues involved, and that plaintiff is estopped and *173 barred by such former adjudication. By way of cross-petition, the defendant Washington L. Clark claims to be the absolute owner of said property, and asks that the title in fee be quieted in him.

There was a trial on the issues, and decree was entered dismissing plaintiff’s petition, upon two grounds: (1) That the action was barred by the former adjudication; and (2) that plaintiff had failed to sustain the allegations of his petition by preponderance of the evidence. The court further found and determined that the allegations of the cross-petition were true, and quieted the title in the defendant Clark, and entered judgment against the plaintiff for costs.

It will be seen, therefore, that the questions triable de novo in this court are two in number < First, is the former adjudication in the case of Merrifield v. Clark, 185 N. W. 594 (not officially reported), decided by this court December 15, 1921, an adjudication of the issues involved in the case at bar, to such an extent that the plaintiff in this suit is bound thereby; and, second, has the plaintiff produced evidence outweighing the evidence of the defendants, and sufficiently cleai*, cogent, and convincing to justify the court in holding that the oral gift was in fact made ?

The primary issue in the former ease and in the case at bar is whether title should be quieted in the appellant Merrifield or the appellee Clark. It is true that, in the former case, title was sought to be quieted in appellant by virtue of a written instrument, to wit, a warranty deed, with certain restrictions. It was held that the evidence was not sufficient to justify the court in deciding the issue of ownership in favor of the plaintiff, mainly on the ground that the evidence did not establish that the deed had ever been delivered. We are now confronted with the question whether or not our holding in that ease that the plaintiff was not entitled to a decree quieting the title in him constitutes an adjudication of his rights now claimed under the instant petition. We have heretofore held that a party seeking to quiet title in a parcel of land alleged by him to belong to Mm must present all of his claims and the bases thereof at one hearing, and, if the adjudication is against him therein, it is res judicata, *174 and constitutes a bar in a second trial to quiet title, based on a different ground.

In Des Moines & F. D. R. Co. v. Bullard, 89 Iowa 749, we said:

“That was a trial of the title of the land, and we will dispose of much that is found in the record in this case by the single remark that the adjudication in the former action disposed of all claim of title which E. F. Bullard had in the land. Tie was the plaintiff in the action, and neither he nor those claiming under him had any right to commence an action upon one claim of title and pursue it to the end of final adjudication, as that case was pursued, and then set up other causes of action in another suit, or by way of defense to an action brought by the defendant in the former action. In other words, it was incumbent oxi Bullard to assert all the claim he had to the land in the former action. This rule is fundamental, and we have neither the time nor inclination to elaborate it.”

Upon the former trial of the • instant actioxx, the right to have the title quieted was based on a written deed; but the evidence was not sufficient to show delivery. Ixi this case, plaintiff seeks to quiet title in hixnself by virtue of an alleged parol gift, executed in 1912. By an amexidment to his petition, he alleges that the defendant stated, at divers times from 1913 to 1918, that defendant did give the land to the plaintiff; that, in the spring of 1918, the defendant fully consummated the oral gift, and gave the plaintiff the full, absolute, coxnplete ownership and control of the laxxd. Both actions, therefore, involved the same issxie, to wit, the right of title. Briefly stated, the contexxtion of appellant is that he has the right to try the questioxx of title to these 200 acres, as between him and the defendant, upon as many different grounds as he may have, and the further right to try the title on each ground, and in separate actioxxs. We cannot adopt this conclusion. If we did so, but affirmed the decree of the -lower court, the plaintiff, if the facts warranted, might, immediately institute a third action, claiming title to the land by virtue of a written contract entered ixxto by and between the parties before the oral gift was made, or before the execution of the deed, axid that the plaintiff had performed his part of the contract and appellee had failed to perform. Other grounds might be as *175 serted. for quieting title, but it would be apparent that in each ease the relief sought would be the same, to wit: the quieting of title to a 200-acre tract of land in the plaintiff, predicated on claims that existed and which could have been asserted at the time the first suit was commenced.

In the case of Thompson v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 191 Iowa 35, it is said:

“But we are not prepared to hold that, even if the construction of the track was not mentioned in the first suit, that this alone would prevent that suit from operating' either as an adjudication or an estoppel against the litigation of certain questions.

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201 N.W. 563, 199 Iowa 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrifield-v-clark-iowa-1925.