Nelson v. Nelson

65 N.W.2d 154, 245 Iowa 1225, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 415
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1954
Docket48516
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 N.W.2d 154 (Nelson v. Nelson) 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
Nelson v. Nelson, 65 N.W.2d 154, 245 Iowa 1225, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 415 (iowa 1954).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

— The administrators of the estate of John P. Anderson, deceased, instituted a suit in equity against Arthur L. Nelson for an accounting for the profits and jointly owned livestock, grain, etc., under a written stock-share farm lease by *1227 decedent to defendant, of a 280-aere farm in Cass Connty, and other land not directly involved in the accounting suit. Thereafter plaintiffs, as such administrators, and individually as heirs-at-law of decedent, instituted against said Nelson and more than one hundred other named defendants, suit to partition the property in question and other real estate owned by decedent. In the first suit defendant Arthur L. Nelson filed answer and counterclaim and in the second suit, answer, counterclaim and cross-petition to establish his ownership of the 280 acres in question and the livestock, feed, etc., thereon. The two suits were consolidated and trial was had. This appeal is by defendant Arthur L. Nelson alone and involves only the landlord-and-tenant accounting and ownership issues between him and plaintiffs and other defendants who joined with plaintiffs. For convenience, Arthur L. Nelson will be referred to herein as defendant.

Defendant pleaded an oral contract with decedent, of date January 15, 1935, superseding the written lease of that date and agreeing that defendant would operate decedent’s Cass County farm of 280 acres, make improvements and repairs thereon at his own expense, care for the livestock and other personal property thereon, owned in equal shares by defendant and decedent, and pay one half of the net earnings to decedent during decedent’s life; and that (we assume although it was not directly pleaded) in consideration therefor, defendant was to become the absolute owner of the 280-acre farm and the jointly owned personal property thereon, at the death of decedent. The main issue is whether this oral contract and its performance were proven. The trial court held defendant had failed to so prove by clear, satisfactory and convincing evidence as required by the rule. Judgment was rendered against defendant accordingly. Hence, this appeal by defendant.

Decedent was a retired farmer. He was unmarried and had no children or close relatives. He died intestate September 9, 1950. Defendant was a distant relative but not an heir-at-law of decedent. Among the lands owned by decedent was a 440-acre farm, composed of the 280 acres here directly involved, in Cass County, and 160 acres in Shelby County. In 1924 and *1228 1925 defendant had rented the 280 acres from decedent for a cash rental. Thereafter until 1935 defendant operated it under an oral stock-share farm lease under which each owned a one-half interest in the livestock, feed and grain and was entitled to one half of the net profits. January 15, 1935, decedent and defendant went to a law office where, after a lengthy discussion, a written Stock-Share Farm Lease was prepared for them.

This lease, with “explanations and suggestions”, was drawn upon a printed form. It covers fourteen pages of the record. It recites decedent leases to defendant the 440 acres, describing the 280 acres in Cass County and 160 acres in Shelby County. The term was one year beginning March 1, 1935, and from year to year thereafter until either party should give the other, before any August 1, written notice of termination at the end of the current lease year. The purpose of this stated in the “explanations” was to provide for a longer term than a one-year lease. It may be here said no such notice of termination was given during decedent’s life.

The general policy stated in the lease was to raise crops to feed livestock which was to be owned by the parties in equal shares. Among other things, the landlord agreed to keep the buildings in repair, to furnish materials to repair fences and buildings and to pay taxes and insurance on the real estate. The tenant agreed to furnish the farm implements, tools and labor for operating the farm and for ordinary repairs of fences and buildings, to pay the operating expenses, one half of which were to be repaid by the landlord, and to pay the landlord one half of the gross income from the farm.

The lease was then and there executed in duplicate by decedent and defendant and one original was held by each party. At that time and place and in the presence of the lawyers, defendant contends he and decedent orally changed the written lease they had just made and entered into an oral agreement that defendant would bear the expense of improvements and repairs on the 280 acres in Cass County and would pay half the profits to decedent during decedent’s life, and that, at decedent’s death defendant would become the owner of the 280-acre farm and decedent’s half of the livestock and other personal property on *1229 the farm. (Defendant asserts the 160 acres in Shelby County remained under the written lease until 1946 when other land in Cass County was substituted for the Shelby County land. In any event, only the 280-acre tract is here directly involved.)

As to the making of the alleged oral agreement to abrogate the written lease on the 280-acre tract, one of the lawyers testified : “At this point I made this remark to Mr. Anderson, that a contract of this kind should be in writing, and Mr. Anderson looked at me rather suspiciously, and said, ‘Ain’t my word good ?’ and I said, ‘Yes, your word is good as long as you live, but when you are dead it doesn’t amount to so much.’ ‘Well’, he said, ‘I will fix that. You lawyers are always looking for a job’, and he walked out.”

According to this 1952 testimony concerning the 1985 transaction, the parties to the farm lease, prepared by their lawyers after an extended conference, abrogated it in the presence of the lawyers immediately after its execution and delivery, suspiciously and facetiously brushed aside the legal advice that a contract to transfer real estate should be in writing, and orally agreed the tenant should take the farm and livestock upon the death of the landlord, without the written cancellation of, or any endorsement upon, the written lease, or any other written evidence of the new contract. The circumstances depicted in this testimony are most unusual. Its unreasonableness properly may be taken into consideration in determining the correctness of the recollection of the witness and the weight to be given such testimony.

Under the dead man statute, section 622.4, Code of Iowa, 1954, defendant was incompetent to testify to any personal transaction or communication between himself and decedent. Defendant’s testimony was taken subject to standing objections to his competency under Code section 622.4, and subject also to various other objections to each question. However, this being an equity suit, rulings on such objections were reserved.

In defendant’s direct examination little attention appears to have been given the dead man statute or other rules of evidence. As a result much of his evidence set out in the record was inadmissible. Among other things, he testified to his business relations and dealings with decedent, both prior to *1230

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Related

Hamilton v. Bethel
131 N.W.2d 445 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1964)
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111 N.W.2d 656 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 N.W.2d 154, 245 Iowa 1225, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-nelson-iowa-1954.