Polsley v. Flowers

128 N.W. 937, 149 Iowa 586
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 16, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 128 N.W. 937 (Polsley v. Flowers) 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
Polsley v. Flowers, 128 N.W. 937, 149 Iowa 586 (iowa 1910).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

Thomas Fleming, a resident of Page County, Iowa, died January 24th, leaving a will by which he devised his entire estate to his wife, Jane Fleming, for life, with remainder over as follows: One-fourth each [587]*587to his sons, Charles Fleming, Franklin Fleming, and Edmund Fleming, and one-eighth each to Harry W. Polsley and Cora M. Polsley, children of his daughter, Delia A. Flowers, but these grandchildren were not to come into possession of their said shares until they arrived at the age of twenty-five years and after the lapse of said life estate. The principal item of the estate left by the testator was a farm of one hundred and ninety acres in Page county. The will was duly probated, and the widow enjoyed the use, rents, and profits of the farm until IVIarch 1, 1902, when she and her three sons, Charles, Franklin and Edmund, and her grandchildren, Harry W. Polsley and Cora M. Polsley, being all of the beneficiaries under said will, and all of full age, united in selling and conveying said land to one Turnbull for the sum of $10,800. Of this sum $2,000 each was paid to Charles, Franklin and Edmund, and $1,000 each to Harry W. Polsley and Cora M. Polsley, and the remainder, $2,800, to the widow, less such expenses as attended the sale. Soon afterward Jane Fleming and her son Charles purchased another farin, taking the title jointly. The agreed purchase price was $10,200, of which $2,200 was contributed by the mother, $2,000 by Charles, and the payment of the remainder was secured' by mortgage which is still a lien on the land. The payment so contributed by Jane Fleming was made from the money received by her from the sale of the home farm. On August 14, 1909, Jane Fleming died intestate leaving as her heirs the three sons above named and the daughter Delia A. Flowers. Within thirty days thereafter this action was instituted for the partition of the land to which the deceased held title at the time of her death. Hpon the trial below it was stipulated and agreed that each of the sons was the rightful owner of a fourth part of the undivided half, or the one-eighth of the entire tract, and this appeal in no manner affects the interests thus settled and determined. As to the other one-eighth part, issue is joined [588]*588between the daughter Delia A. Flowers and her children. Her claim is to the effect that Jane Fleming was seized in her own right of the undivided one-half of said land, and, dying intestate, such title was cast upon her four children Charles, Franklin, Edmund, and Delia in equal shares. This proposition is contested by Harry M. Polsley and Cora M. Polsley, who say that under the circumstances above related their grandmother Jane Fleming must be held to have taken such title in trust for the benefit of the remaindermen named in the will of Thomas Fleming, and to have acquired for herself no heritable interest in said land, with the result that the title to the one-eighth part now claimed by the said Delia A. Flowers passed equitably to the appellees,- and that their mother has no part or share therein. The trial court sustained this latter contention, and found the equitable title to said one-eighth share to be in Harry W. Polsley and Cora M. Polsley (now Coates). The defendant Delia A. Flowers appeals.

To sustain the conclusion arrived at by the court below, it must be found from the evidence that the $2,200 which Jane Fleming invested in This purchase was a trust fund in her hands, and that such trust was as a matter of equity impressed upon the property so acquired by her. Much of the testimony was subject to the objection made to the competency of the witnesses, but the admitted or stipulated facts are probably sufficient to determine in a reasonably satisfactory manner the relations and rights of the parties in the subject matter of the litigation.

It appears quite clearly as above stated that Jane Fleming received about $2,800 out of the $10,800, for which the land devised by the will was sold, and that of this sum she used $2,200. in the purchase of the property in controversy. But this of itself by no means impresses a trust character tipon the money in her hands or upon the land purchased with it. In other words, the fact that she received money in consideration of her uniting in the [589]*589conveyance of the land in which she held a life estate does not necessarily tend to show that she • received it in trust. On the contrary, in the absence of any other showing, the natural inference is that she received it in her own right, and the burden of impressing it with any other character rests upon the appellees. The record presents a case where the title to land stood in six persons; that is to say, a life estate in the widow of Thomas Fleming, and the remainder in his three sons and the two grandchildren named in the will. All these persons — life tenant and remaindermen— united in a conveyance to Turnbull. Each could convey what he or she owned and no more — the widow her life estate, and the sons and grandchildren their remainder. Each conveyed that which represented substantial value, and in the absence of any agreement to the contrary each would be entitled to demand and receive a proportionate part of the consideration given for the full title so conveyed. Even without the concurrence of the remaindermen, the widow might have sold and conveyed her life estate, and the money or property so derived would belong to her in her own right, and upon her dying intestate would descend to her heirs. State v. Culbertson, 50 Mo. 341; Ferris v. Poucher, 152 Mich. 251 (115 N. W. 1054). So, too, if, being the life tenant, she had assumed to convey the entire fee and received full value therefor, it would not ordinarily bind the remaindermen. Her deed would only be effective to the extent of her interest in the land, and the remaindermen would be entitled to no part or share in the consideration unless they saw fit to ratify her act, and relinquish to the purchaser all their rights in the property, in which case they might call her to account. The sum paid by Turnbull ($10,800) was not given in consideration of his purchase of the life estate alone or of the remainder alone, but in consideration of his receiving a conveyance of both, thereby uniting in himself both estates, and perfecting his title to’ the land. It was of [590]*590course competent for the widow to waive her right to share in said payment, but there is not a word of testimony that she did so, nor is any such claim asserted by the appellees. On the contrary, it would seem that the money was amicably divided, $8,000 being distributed in due proportion to the remaindermen, and $2,800 to the life tenant; and, so far from recognizing any right therein on the part of any other person, she proceeded at once . to invest it in property in her own name and to deal with that property as her own. The grantors, including the appellees, were all of full age. They voluntarily conveyed their several interests. If they were not satisfied to accept the sum received by them in full payment for their interests which they conveyed, they could have refused it and withheld the deeds, or they could have delivered their deeds and taken the matter into court for a judicial determination of their respective shares in the proceeds of the sale. But the very fact that -the money was divided, each taking a substantial share thereof, and that there is no evidence whatever tending to show any agreement or understanding whereby the widow bound herself to treat the money received by her as a trust fund for the appellees, is a sufficient reason for denying the relief demanded by them.

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Bluebook (online)
128 N.W. 937, 149 Iowa 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polsley-v-flowers-iowa-1910.