Mill Owners Mutual Fire Insurance v. Petley

229 N.W. 736, 210 Iowa 1085
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 11, 1930
DocketNo. 39738.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 229 N.W. 736 (Mill Owners Mutual Fire Insurance v. Petley) 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
Mill Owners Mutual Fire Insurance v. Petley, 229 N.W. 736, 210 Iowa 1085 (iowa 1930).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

On December 21, 1927, the plaintiff-appellant, Mill Owners Mutual Fire Insurance Company, commenced an action against Isobel Cray MaeMahon and Charles E. MacMahon, defendants and appellees, to foreclose a real estate mortgage on 275 acres of land in Polk County, securing a note in the principal sum of $27,500, with accrued interest. Such mortgaged land is located near Youngstown, which is just outside the Des Moines city limits, and one and one-half miles from a street car line. Originally this mortgage was given by the appellee Mrs. MaeMahon to the Security Loan & Investment Company of Des Moines, under date of January 22, 1924, and was assigned by the Security Loan & Investment Company to the appellant February 2d thereafter. When the mortgage was executed by the appellee Mrs. MaeMahon, she and the appellee Mr. MaeMahon were husband and wife. Execution, however, as before suggested, was made by Mrs. MaeMahon only.

By way of answer, the appellees admitted the mortgage indebtedness, but pleaded that 40 acres of the property constituted their homestead, and consequently were exempt from execution, because the husband did not sign the mortgage.

*1087 A reply was filed to appellees’ answer in the district court, attempting to avoid the homestead defense, because: First, the homestead, as such, was abandoned before the mortgage was executed; second, the said Isobel Gray MacMahon and Charles E. MacMahon, before their marriage, entered into a prenuptial agreement whereby the homestead was waived; and third, the husband and wife, through their acts, estopped themselves from claiming the exemption. As previously indicated, the district court held that appellees ’ answer set up a good defense. Accordingly, foreclosure of the 'mortgage against the homestead was denied. Subsequent to the trial, judgment, and decree in the court below, Isobel Gray MacMahon died, on May 27, 1929. Hence, the appellee William W. Petley was appointed administrator of her estate, and duly substituted as a party appellee here.

Through a motion based on newly discovered evidence filed in the district court after judgment, the appellant sought a new trial, on the supposition that the will of the appellee Isobel Gray MacMahon, left at her death, constituted such evidence. This redress was also refused by the court below. So we are asked to review, not only the original judgment and decree, but also the denial of the new trial.

I. Was the 40-acre tract, claimed as exempt, in fact a homestead at the time the mortgage was executed 1 That is the first question. Appellant insists that the homestead was abandoned before the mortgage was executed. The facts will settle the dispute.

Formerly, Isobel Gray MacMahon was Mrs. L. B. Gray. Three children were born to the Grajos. L. B. Gray died in Chicago, Illinois, in 1912. At that time he owned the real estate now covered by the mortgage. Said farm land was devised to the appellee Isobel Gray MacMahon through Gray’s will. Appellee Charles E. MacMahon later became Mrs. Gray’s second husband. Mrs. Gray, now Mrs. MacMahon, the appellee, continued living in Chicago with her three children until sometime in 1916, when she and the children moved to the farm in question. Mr. Gray, before his death, had contemplated building a home on this farm. Excavation for a house had been made by him. Also, some timber had been cut, for the purposes of the improve *1088 ment. For the purposes of carrying out the idea entertained by her husband before his death, Mrs. Gray built a stucco bungalow on said site previously selected by Mr. Gray before his death. After the house was completed, the appellee, then Mrs. Gray, lived on the farm with her three children.

Thereafter, on December 1, 1920, Mrs. Gray married the appellee Charles E. MacMahon. Henceforth, the appellees, as husband and wife, together with the three children aforesaid, continued to live on the farm. Dispute arises concerning some of the subsequent facts.

Contention is made by the appellant that, soon after the marriage between MacMahon and Mrs. Gray, the latter purchased a home in Des Moines, at 1425 Thirtieth Street, and moved into it. In addition thereto, Mrs. MacMahon bought a duplex, located on the east side of Des Moines, “where she also lived part of the time.” All three properties, including the farm, the Thirtieth Street house, and the east-side duplex, were used by appellees for rental purposes.

Continuing the statement of its theory, the appellant suggests that Mrs. MacMahon had always lived in a large city, was educated, possessed a large library, and was unaccustomed to the country life. It is concluded, therefore, that she intended the city to be her home, and that the farm was used merely as a means to raise money with which to buy the town property. Reference is made by appellant: First, to the Polk Directory, which shows the residence of Charles E. MacMahon,the appellee, as 1425 Thirtieth Street in 1923, and occupation “real estate;” and second, to the school records of Des Moines, indicating the residence of the MacMahons likewise as 1425 Thirtieth Street for the years 1923 and 1924.

Again, it is said by the appellant that, before Isobel Gray became Mrs. MacMahon, she and the appellee Charles E. MaeMahon entered into a prenuptial contract relating to'the property under consideration, but in that agreement, which will hereinafter be discussed, the farm is not expressly referred to as a homestead. Thus appellant would have us infer that the parties to the prenuptial agreement did not consider the farm land as a homestead. Furthermore, appellant refers to the fact that two previous mortgages were put upon this land, and the money used to buy the city property, ivhere the appellees might live, *1089 and educate the three children. Education for the children, appellant suggests, was the underlying thought of Mrs. MacMahon throughout all these transactions. Finally, appellant asserts that the appellee Mrs. MacMahon went to California for her health, and there died. She left a will, however, conveying the farm to a trustee for the use and benefit of the children. Express reference in the will is made to the prenuptial contract, and that because thereof, the appellee Mr. MacMahon is to have no interest in the property. Therefore, it is argued that Mrs. MacMahon, when making the will, did not consider the farm a homestead.in which her husband, Mr. MacMahon, had any interest. Such are the theories, inferences, and arguments advanced by appellant.

To overcome the foregoing suggestions of appellant, the appellees offer the following facts: First, they say that the record is not clear concerning when the appellee Mrs. MacMahon purchased the town property, but apparently the same was bought after the mortgage in question was executed. However that may be, it seems there were two houses on the land. A tenant lived in one, and the appellees resided in the other.' During all the time under consideration, appellees had their furniture and cooking utensils in their home on the farm. Whatever time was spent in Des Moines was temporary in its nature, and the purpose of the Des Moines residence was to accommodate the children during those periods of the year when the weather was most disagreeable and the roads most impassable. Some time was spent by the appellee Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
229 N.W. 736, 210 Iowa 1085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mill-owners-mutual-fire-insurance-v-petley-iowa-1930.