Olsen v. Olsen

18 N.W.2d 602, 236 Iowa 313, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 453
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 8, 1945
DocketNo. 46634.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 602 (Olsen v. Olsen) 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
Olsen v. Olsen, 18 N.W.2d 602, 236 Iowa 313, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 453 (iowa 1945).

Opinion

Miller, J.

This is an action to quiet title to a*

farm, a quarter section in Cerro Gordo county, and to certain personal property on the farm, or, in the alternative, to impress a lien on the land for improvements placed thereon by the plaintiff. Certain facts are undisputed or so clearly established as to be treated as verities by us. A statement of such facts will clarify the issues presented by the rather voluminous pleadings herein. Such facts are as follows: Plaintiff, a farmer, was born in Norway, was seventy years old at the time of trial, was uneducated, could not read or write except to sign his name; his wife, Aleta B. Olsen, was deceased at the time of trial; four children had survived her, Mildred Van Laere, Gladys Olsen, Clare Olsen, and Arlin C. Olsen; the farm in question had been purchased by plaintiff from his parents; he owned .it when, at twenty-seven, he married Aleta; in 1932, plaintiff was ill, thought that he was going to die, and executed a deed to the farm to his wife, Aleta, so that, in the event of his death, she could continue to farm it and would not be embarrassed by having the title thereto divided between herself and the children; plaintiff recovered and continued to farm the land as his own; in 1942, Aleta became ill and executed to plaintiff two deeds, one to certain land in Hancock County, Iowa, in which she had an undivided one-eighth interest subject to a life estate, and the other to certain property in Wisconsin *315 in which she had an undivided one-fifth interest; these deeds did not include, in the property conveyed, the quarter section in Cerro Gordo county; after their mother’s death, two of the children, Gladys and Clare, conveyed to plaintiff any interest they might have in the farm. The defendants are Arlin C. Olsen, son, and Mildred Van Laere, daughter of plaintiff, August Van Laere, husband of Mildred, and C. I. Snyder, administrator of Aleta Olsen’s estate.

It was the contention of plaintiff and the trial court found that the evidence established: That the conveyance of the farm by plaintiff to his wife, Aleta, in 1932 was made with no consideration being paid by her therefor, pursuant to an agreement that, in ease plaintiff regained his health the farm would be deeded back to him; that, at the time Aleta executed the deeds in 1942, she intended to convey all of her property to plaintiff; the deeds which were prepared for her were believed to convey all of her land to plaintiff; the farm in Cerro Gordo county was not included in the deeds by oversight and mistake ; the evidence is clear, satisfactory, and convincing as to Aleta’s intention and that an oversight or mistake occurred; that the personal property on the farm was owned by plaintiff, was never formally transferred to Aleta; Aleta listed the property as her own; if a transfer to her could be created by conduct or admissions, her claim of title thereto was abandoned as early as September 1941. Pursuant to such findings, the trial court entered a decree quieting title to the personal property and to the Cerro Gordo county farm in plaintiff. The defendants appeal from such decree. They assert eleven assignments of error. We will first consider those assignments which relate to that part of the decree which quieted title to the 'farm in plaintiff.

I. As far as the action to quiet title to the farm is concerned, relief was granted under the authority of a court of equity to reform written instruments. Plaintiff’s theory is: That in 1932 he made an oral contract with his wife, the terms of which were that he would convey the farm to her and, if he recovered from his illness, she would reconvey the farm to him; he performed his part of the agreement in 1932 by conveying the farm to her; she undertook to perform her part of the *316 agreement in 1942 by executing two deeds, which she intended,, and the parties believed, to convey to plaintiff all of her property; by oversight or mistake the deeds failed to include, in the description of the property conveyed, the- Cerro Gordo county farm. The decree in effect reformed the deeds of 1942 by treating them- as- a conveyance of the Cerro Gordo county farm to correct such oversight or mistake.

Counsel for plaintiff cites, as- authority for' the decree'herein, our decision in Kessler v. Terrell, 192 Iowa 442, 447, 185 N. W. 15, 17. In that ease a deed failed to properly describe the property the grantor intended to convey. He refused to execute a correction deed. The grantee brought an action to quiet title. The grantor cross-petitioned to have title quieted in him. The court dismissed the grantee’s petition and entered a decree in favor of the grantor on his cross-petition. On appeal, this court reversed the decree and ordered that the grantee be given the relief demanded in her petition, stating as follows:

“We do not believe that, under these circumstances, the appellee is now in a position to take advantage of the fact that the deed contained an erroneous description of the premises. It is not to be forgotten that he testified that he executed the deed for the purpose of' conveying the interest that he had in the property he had received from his grandfather. Upon his own evidence, a court of equity would have been warranted in reforming the deed, to correct the misdescription of the premises. This proceeding to quiet the title is, in effect, no more than an action for reformation of the deed, in regard to the description of the property.”

The'foregoing pronouncement clearly sustains the trial court insofar as its power to act , is concerned. «The question- still remains whether the record supports the findings and decree.

II. Counsel for defendant do hot meet the theory of the plaintiff and the trial court but treat the action as one which seeks to vary the terms of the' deed of 1932 by adding thereto- provisions for a reversion of the title conveyed in the event of the happening óf a condition subsequent. A large number of authorities under the parol-evidence rule are *317 cited in support of their contentions. It is not necessary to discuss or decide such contentions. They have no bearing on the issue before us. "We have held repeatedly that, in a proper ease for the reformation of a written instrument, tbe parolevidence rule has no application.

In re Estate of Simplot, 215 Iowa 578, 581, 246 N. W. 396, 397, we stated:

“The parties agree in the broad statement of the rule which forbids the acceptance of parol evidence to contradict or vary the terms of a written contract. Their disagreement arises over the application of the rule and over the so-called ‘exceptions’ to the rule. * * * These so-called ‘exceptions’ may be classified in the main as follows:
“1. The rule has no application to suits in equity for reformation of written contracts. Parol evidence is always admissible in such a ease.”

In Wormer v. Gilchrist, 210 Iowa 463, 466, 230 N. W. 856, 858, we stated:

“The well settled rule that parol evidence cannot be invoked to vary the terms of a contract has no application to prevent proof of a mistake or reform an instrument to correct the mistake. Greiner v. Swartz, 167 Iowa 543. See, also, Good Milking Mach. Co. v. Galloway, 168 Iowa 550; Bonbright v. Bonbright, 123 Iowa 305; Hausbrandt v. Hofler, 117 Iowa 103; Lee & Jamieson v.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 602, 236 Iowa 313, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olsen-v-olsen-iowa-1945.