Peet v. Monger

56 N.W.2d 589, 244 Iowa 247, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 13, 1953
Docket48094
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 56 N.W.2d 589 (Peet v. Monger) 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
Peet v. Monger, 56 N.W.2d 589, 244 Iowa 247, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 389 (iowa 1953).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

On August 29, 1905, Edward Snyder and Stella M. Heitchen, both of Anamosa, Iowa, just before their marriage, entered into and acknowledged the execution of a written ante-nuptial contract, which was recorded on August 30, 1905, in the office of the recorder of Jones County, Iowa, in which county they lived. They were middle aged and probably did not contemplate there would be any issue of the marriage, and there was none. Her father, mother and husband predeceased her, and she died spouseless, parentless, childless, without brothers or sisters, and intestate, in 1945.

No heirs on her father’s side were found. She had heirs on her mother’s side consisting of several cousins of different degrees of kinship. They are spoken of in the record as the “Heitchen” heirs. We will refer to them as the Heitchens. They are appellees herein. The heirs of intestate’s deceased husband we will refer to as the Snyders.

Apparently without knowledge of the antenuptial agreement, Maude Peet and James F. May, both being Heitchen heirs, and each owning an undivided %4 interest in the intestate estate, with their spouses, on April 24, 1948, filed the petition in this *250 suit. They named as defendants both tbe Heitchen and the Snyder heirs, and designated their respective fractional interests from %2 to %92- The state of Iowa was impleaded as a defendant, with all other parties asserting that it took nothing by way of escheat. All was harmonious between the two sets of heirs, and on October 1, 1948, decree was entered dividing the estate equally between the two sets of heirs and confirming the respective undivided interests as pleaded, and referees were appointed to sell the real estate, consisting of 226 acres of land and the Anamosa property, and to divide the proceeds of sale.

The Heitchens then discovered the antenuptial contract, and some of them, who had been served with notice of the suit by publication and had not appeared in the suit, on March 29, 1949, under rule 251 of It. C. P., filed application for retrial and vacation or modification of the decree because of the antenuptial contract and of errors thereby resulting in the division of the property. The relief was granted and appropriate pleadings were filed by both the Heitchens and the Snyders. The latter alleged that while the antenuptial contract barred Mr. Snyder during his life of any interest in his wife’s property, and that since he died before she did, he, of course, could assert no interest in her estate whether she died testate or intestate, nevertheless, they alleged that the contract did not bar them, since under section 636.41 of the 1946 Code they were making claims to Mrs. Snyder’s estate, not as heirs of Mr. Snyder, but as heirs of Mrs. Snyder.

The Heitchens moved to strike this alleged defense from the pleadings, and on August 17,1950, filed their first application for an adjudication of this issue as a point of law under rule 105 of R. C.P. On January 19, 1951, the court ruled in favor of the Heitchens on their application.

The Snyders, with permission of the court, on March 16, 1951, amended their various pleadings previously filed by adding to each a new division, as follows:

“Par. 1. That on February 11, 1912, A. Heitchen of Ana-mosa * * *, the father of Stella Heitchen, died a resident of Jones County, Iowa.
“Par. 2. That on the 24th day of February, 1934, Stella H. Snyder conveyed by warranty deed to herself and her husband, *251 Edwar.d C. Snyder, as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, with the full right of the survivor to take the whole title and right of property of both in fee simple and absolutely, all, or substantially all, of the real estate which she then owned; that said deed was filed for record in the office of the Recorder of Jones County, Iowa, on November 26, 1935, in Book 96, page 224
“Par. 3. That the execution, delivery and acceptance of the deed * * * operated to effect a mutual rescission, abandonment and revocation of the antenuptial contract * * *.
“Par. 4. That the said Stella H. Snyder, by the execution and delivery of said deed, relieved and discharged Edward C. Snyder from any duties and obligations under the prior antenup-tial agreement herein referred to, and did waive thereby his performance of any duties and obligations under said antenuptial contract.”

Attached to the pleading as an exhibit was the copy of the deed which recited the conveyance, as alleged in paragraph 2 of the pleading, of 440 acres of land in Jones County, Iowa, for a paid consideration of one dollar.

After various pleadings challenging the filing of the amendment, among which was a motion to strike it, the Heitchens, on June 30, 1951, filed a second application for adjudication of law points under said rule 105 of R. C. P. additional to the application filed on August 17, 1950. The ground of the second application was that the matters pleaded were irrelevant and immaterial and had no essential or material bearing on the force or effect of the antenuptial contract; that nothing was pleaded indicating any agreement, oral or in writing, or any circumstances tending to show that the parties to the contract intended to cancel or rescind it, and that the said deed was but a contingent gift of property, which Mrs. Snyder could properly make without nullifying the antenuptial contract. On December 27, 1951, the court- again ruled favorably for the Heitchens and adversely to the Snyders. The latter appealed on the adjudications as decreed on January 19, 1951, and on December 27, 1951.

The antenuptial contract stated:

“Whereas, the said parties hereto contemplate and have *252 entered into a contract to enter tbe marriage relation, Now Therefore, in consideration of said contract and of one doEar paid by each to the other it is mutually agreed between them—
“First: That the said Stella M. Heitehen shall have the right to manage, control, encumber, sell and convey all the property she now owns, real and personal, and all she may hereafter acquire, as fully and completely as if she remained unmarried, and all contracts, conveyances, and encumbrances of the said party shall have the same effect and force as if the said Edward Snyder had joined with her in the same.
“Second: Said Stella M. Heitehen shall have the right to devise, will and bequeath all her property, real and personal, in case of her death, the same as if she remained unmarried, and in case of her death, intestate, the said Edward Snyder hereby relinquishes any and all claims or interest therein, including dower or distributive share therein, and the same shall descend to the legal heirs at law of the said Stella M. Heitehen the same as if said marriage relation had never been contracted.
“Third: It is further agreed between the above named parties that A. Heitehen, of Anamosa, Iowa, father of said Stella M. Heitehen, shall manage and control all the property interest, real and personal, of the said Stella M. Heitehen during his lifetime.”

The Snyders, appellants, rely for reversal upon the following asserted errors of the court, namely:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 N.W.2d 589, 244 Iowa 247, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peet-v-monger-iowa-1953.