Petty v. Hewlett

281 N.W. 731, 225 Iowa 797
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 18, 1938
DocketNo. 44486.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 281 N.W. 731 (Petty v. Hewlett) 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
Petty v. Hewlett, 281 N.W. 731, 225 Iowa 797 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

— J. D. Petty and his wife, Sophia Petty, both died intestate, seized in fee of certain described real estate. On the 27th day of March, 1936, some of the heirs started an action, seeking to partition the real estate left by their father and mother. The administrators of the estates were made parties to said action. In the petition it was alleged that certain heirs were indebted to the two estates, and as a part ,of the relief it was sought to charge the indebtedness of each of the heirs against his interest in the real estate. All of the parties defendant were served with notice of the pendency of said cause, including Marley Petty, who on October 7, 1937, filed his answer, admitting liability to the estates, and that he was insolvent. On the 20th day of January, 1938, a decree in said partition action was entered, which provided for the appointment of appraisers to fix the value of the real estate, and of referees to sell the land. *799 And it further specifically provided “that the defendant Marley Petty has no interest whatever in said real estate far the reason that he is indebted to the plaintiffs and the other defendants in a sum in excess of the value of his interest in said real estate, and the interest of the plaintiffs and defendants, Roscoe Petty, Wilma Corporon, Flossie Logan, Blanche Hewlett and Darwin Petty, should therefore be an undivided one-fifth interest in all of said real estate instead of an undivided one-sixth interest.”

After the filing of the petition, .and prior to the entering of the decree, the appellants each obtained a judgment against the said Marley Petty. It should be noted that the judgment creditors did not intervene in the partition action.

The referees proceeded to sell the real estate, in compliance with the terms of the decree, and the day after the sealed bids were received the attorney of record representing Grace Smith and the Bamford Clinic, appellants in this case, orally notified the referees that appellants held judgments against Marley Petty, one of the parties to this action, and “if the referees paid out the proceeds of the sale without paying said judgments against Marley Petty they would do so at their peril; that the said judgment creditors were claiming the same rights to the proceeds of the sale that they had in the partitioned real estate.” The referees then prayed that the court would direct them in their action. Notice was given Grace Smith and the Bamford Clinic, the appellants, and they appeared, filing objections to the. final report, alleging that they were not parties to the action prior to the time of the filing of their written appearance, which was on the 7th day of February, 1938; that they were not parties to the action at the time the decree was entered on the 20th day of January, 1938, finding that Marley Petty had no interest in said real estate, and that they were not in any manner bound by said decree. They denied that Marley Petty was ever indebted to the estates of Sophia Petty and J. D. Petty.

The cause then came on for trial upon the final report of the referees, and the objections filed to same by appellants. Evidence was offered and the lower court on the 25th day of February, 1938, entered an order, approving the sale of the real estate, approving the final report of the referees, overruling the objections of appellants, and ordering distribution of the sums of money that came into the hands of the referees, in compliance with the report they had filed.

*800 Being dissatisfied with this order, Grace Smith and the Barn-ford Clinic have appealed to this court.

It should be specifically noted: (1) That the appellants were not judgment creditors of Marley Petty at the time of the commencement of the partition action; (2) that the original petition prayed for the rights of the heirs to be adjudicated, and that the indebtedness of the heirs be offset against their interests in the real estate; (3) that the original decree found Marley Petty had no interest in the land sought to be partitioned; (4) that the original decree is not now being, and never has been, attacked by appellants.

There are many exceedingly interesting questions raised in this case.

Code section 12323 of the 1935 Code provides:

“12323. Lien on undivided interests. If the lien is upon one or more undivided interests, the holder thereof shall be made a party, and the lien shall, after partition or sale, remain a charge upon the particular interests or the proceeds thereof, but the amount of costs is a charge upon those interests, paramount to all other liens.”

This statute, however, does not apply to the case at bar, for a,t the time the partition action was commenced tire appellants did not have, and they do not claim to have had, any lien against the interests of any party in the real estate. Their judgments were not entered until after the partition action was commenced. They base their cause of action upon the case of Ferguson v. Hamilton, reported in 206 Iowa 1285, at page 1289, 221 N. W. 947, at page 948, where, in a statement not necessary to the decision, this court said:

“If appellant had seen fit to serve notice upon the referee and upon his debtor, Brewer, and had brought properly before the court the question of his right to Brewer’s share in the property before distribution had been made by the referee, we would have an entirely different question from the one presented to us.”

We do not find it necessary to pass upon this question in the case at bar.

In the petition it was' alleged that Marley Petty was indebted to the estates in an amount in excess of the value of any interest he might have in the real estate, and that the estates *801 were entitled to an offset against bis interest. Marley Petty filed answer, in which he admitted the indebtedness, and that be was insolvent. Upon the trial of the partition action the lower court found, and specifically set out in the decree, that Marley Petty bad no interest in the real estate. That original decree bas never been attacked. No claim is bere made that there was 'any fraud in the entering of it. Appellants’ right to recover is based solely upon the interest of Marley Petty in the real estate. If he had no interest in the real estate, then of course appellants have no right against the proceeds of the sale of the real estate in the hands of the referees.

It appears that this court has had some difficulty in arriving at a conclusion as to whether or not the amount which an insolvent devisee is owing to a solvent estate may, in a partition proceeding, be offset against his interest in the real estate, and whether such right is superior to the right of a judgment creditor who obtained his judgment against the devisee subsequent to the death of the party from whom the devisee claims the interest in the real estate.

In the case of Schultz v. Locke, 204 Iowa 1127, 216 N. W. 617, in an opinion written by Justice Faville, this court lays down certain propositions. We read as follows, at pages 1128-30, 216 N. W. at page 618:

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Related

In Re Estate of Ferris
14 N.W.2d 889 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1944)
In Re Estate of Fairchild
3 N.W.2d 157 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 731, 225 Iowa 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petty-v-hewlett-iowa-1938.