Mutual Trust Life Insurance v. Dean

266 N.W. 282, 221 Iowa 591
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1936
DocketNo. 43216.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 266 N.W. 282 (Mutual Trust Life Insurance v. Dean) 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
Mutual Trust Life Insurance v. Dean, 266 N.W. 282, 221 Iowa 591 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

It is the contention of appellants that this case falls within the rule announced by the majority opinions in the cases of Federal Land Bank v. Wilmarth, 218 Iowa 339, 252 N. W. 507, 94 A. L. R. 1338, and Reed v. Snow, 218 Iowa 1165, 254 N. W. 800. We have carefully read and considered the record, and while in some respects the fact situations in this'case and in the above cases are similar, they are in no sense parallel.

The defendants are husband and wife, about thirty years of age, at the very threshold of maturity of judgment and discretion, capable, if ever, to face the world with courage and fortitude. There is no evidence that these young people are shiftless, improvident, or dishonest. Like multitudes of others, ap *592 parently they builded too well and incurred indebtedness in so doing, that, in the years of low prices which followed, left them with shortened purse strings, with no corresponding contraction of obligations. The gift of prophetic vision, it seems, was withheld from these lowly swains of the soil, and the alluring mirage of perpetual prosperity led them deep into the uncharted desert of unprecedented depression. But they were not alone in their illusion. The plaintiff insurance company was likewise dazzled by the brightness of prospects, for in March, 1928, it loaned the defendants, on their 240-acre farm, $100 per acre, or $24,000. This was long after the era of boom prices in real estate. Granting the plaintiff the status of the ordinary conservative corporate loan agency, loaning up to 60 per cent of the appraised value of the land, we conclude this farm was valued by plaintiff in 1928 at $40,000. The evidence as to value at the time of the hearing on this motion for continuance (April, 1935) varied from $80 to $125 per acre, one witness stating that in normal times the value would be $150. The plaintiff’s witnesses in describing the farm used such terms as “worth $100.00 an acre easy,” “farm in high state of cultivation,” “one of the best farms in Ocheyedan territory,” “improvements good,” “soil is good black loam.” Defendants’ witnesses placed the value at $125. One of them said the farm in his judgment would bring $115 at auction. That the farm is highly productive is shown by the testimony of plaintiff’s witness Brunk, who for the past seven years had farmed the same as a tenant of the defendants. He said: “I paid the 1931 and 1932 crop rent to Forest Dean. In 1931 I paid $1800 rent to Forest Dean. In 1932 I turned over to Forest Dean 5600 bushels of corn and 1600 bushels of barley and $300.00 in cash. The farm is improved with a chicken house, corn crib, granary, two story house, two barns. Buildings better than average. Farm all open to cultivation. Fences are fair. Many posts are broken. Cedar posts and 36 inch woven wire fenced in 40-acre pieces with lanes. Electricity served from highline along south end of farm adjacent to Primary Road No. 9. Buildings located 80 rods from highway. I farmed that land myself and it is in good condition. Soil is good black loam. The farm is located one mile north of the town of Ocheyedan. There is no normal market on farms in this vicinity. I would say that the Dean farm is worth $100.00 an acre easy, but I don’t know if it is worth more than that. ’ ’

*593 The total mortgage indebtedness after deducting rent for 1934 and 1935 figured to February, 1936, is $27,187.20. This added to other indebtedness of the defendants brings the total indebtedness to the sum of $30,979.20 It appears from the evidence that in 1932 the defendant, being unable to make ends meet in farming, rented the farm and built an oil station on' one corner of the same, out on Primary Highway No. 9, and attempted to make some money in selling gas and oil. In order to do this, he borrowed the money and assigned as security the crops for 1932 and 1933. He procured the consent of the plaintiff to release the mortgage on the two acres of land upon which the filling station was located by paying them $750, which was applied upon the mortgage indebtedness. He has since sold the filling station, and the purchaser, one Mr. Skinner, owes the defendants on the purchase price the sum of $2,000. This $2,000 due him, added to the value of the farm as fairly estimated from the evidence, leaves the items of debit and credit almost on a par. So it cannot be said that the defendants are hopelessly insolvent, and that there is no possibility of the defendants’ refinancing- or disposing of the farm for sufficient to liquidate the indebtedness within the period of the moratorium statute, as was the finding in the Wilmarth and Snow cases, above referred to.

There are some circumstances which would indicate that back in 1932 the defendants were preparing to leave, and did abandon all hope of holding the farm. This is evidenced by the fact that the defendants moved off the farm and rented the same and went into other business, and at the same time dismantled the electric equipment, moving some of the light fixtures in the house and taking out the push buttons and plates, and likewise removing the pipeless furnace, and also tearing down a board fence and removing some of the mangers and stalls from one of the barns and a few rods of woven wire fence. Defendant by way of explanation of this conduct stated: “I had to quit farming because I was not able to carry on financially. I rented the farm to Mr. Brunk and I went into the hatchery business and used the farm buildings on the Dean farm for that purpose. Later, I built an oil station on the corner of this farm and ran it for a while. I took the furnace out of the farm home and put it in the gas station. The furnace had not worked for a year— was not worth fixing upj has not worked in the gas station where I took it. I assigned one half of my 1932 crop lease to my *594 brother, Wilber Dean, to secure him on money he lent me to build a gas station. I paid for this gas station out of the 1932 and 1933 crops. The stalls and mangers were taken out of the barn the first year I moved there, 8 or 10 years ago, before plaintiff’s mortgage. I put heavy wires to carry 220 volts but wind and sleet broke down the wires between the buildings. I had not used lights for a year. Couldn’t afford it. I moved it off figuring the renter might not take care of it. There were three fixtures in the house which cost $1.50 a piece and upstairs were drop cords. Buildings were all wired. I just disconnected them. I took the high board fence, part of which had fallen down, cut it into boards, and made brooder houses. Posts were rotten.”

It appears from the evidence that the defendant had figured for some time on getting help from his mother, who owns a one-fourth interest in a farm near Cedar Falls, and likewise has an interest in a claim against an oil company now in litigation in the United States Supreme Court, being a one-fourth interest in a one-half million dollar claim, and that his mother had told him that if she received this money she would pay off the mortgage. He further testified that two.or three years ago he offered to give plaintiff the rents if they would not foreclose, and that he sent them the 1934 lease on what he thought was such an agreement. After receiving this lease, the plaintiff, on October 13, 1933, filed their petition to foreclose the mortgage.

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Related

Prudential Insurance v. Schaefer
278 N.W. 602 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
266 N.W. 282, 221 Iowa 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-trust-life-insurance-v-dean-iowa-1936.