Rance v. Gaddis

284 N.W. 468, 226 Iowa 531
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 7, 1939
DocketNo. 43945.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 284 N.W. 468 (Rance v. Gaddis) 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
Rance v. Gaddis, 284 N.W. 468, 226 Iowa 531 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

*533 Bliss, J.-

This is a fraud case. It is the sordid story of the duplicity and depravity of a human male, and of the weakness and credulity of a foolish woman. Like most cases of fraud, the decisive questions are of fact and not of law. The decree of the able trial judge is amply sustained by the facts and the law. A somewhat detailed narration of these facts is necessary.

Bea Banks, the intervenor, in 1932, became the owner of a residence property in one of the better residence districts of Cedar Rapids. She married Ralph West, in June 1929, and divorced him in November 1932, in Wisconsin. He was a bootlegger and a rather violent character. In December 1932, she married Moorehead, in Illinois. Because the marriage was within one year after the Wisconsin decree and contrary to the statutes of Wisconsin, they became somewhat alarmed over their marital status, and together they consulted an attorney in Cedar Rapids, and Moorehead procured the divorce, in March 1933. She had paid $6,000 for the home and had expended approximately an equal amount in fixtures and furnishings. Sometime in 1933 she became acquainted with the appellee, Ranee. She was then about thirty-six years old, and he about thirty-three. He was a bachelor living with his mother, and holding a responsible position with the Builders Material Company. They were together quite often and were very good friends. While her home and personal property were clear, she had no income, and the plaintiff advanced her money from time to time. Her ex-husband, West, made her considerable trouble with threats of various kinds, demands for money, and on one occasion came into her home and broke some of the furniture. Up to November 1933, Ranee had loaned her $500, and it was apparent she would need more in the future. On November 16, 1933, they consulted E. J. Dahms, a lawyer in Cedar Rapids, whom she and Moorehead had consulted, and who represented Moorehead in the divorce action. She told Dahms that she wished to secure Ranee with a mortgage. Dahms suggested that since Ranee was going to loan her money as. she might need it, that the consideration of the mortgage be put at $1,100. She then suggested that it would be agreeable to her to give Ranee a deed to her home, as security, particularly, as her former husband, West, would be less likely to bother her if she did not have title. Dahms then prepared, and she executed a straigiht warranty deed conveying her residence property to Ranee, for a *534 stated consideration of one dollar and other valuable consideration. There is little, if any, dispute as to the above stated facts.

There is evidence tending to show the following facts: The intervenor met the appellant, Roy Gaddis, in March 1934, and. in the following July, they began keeping company steadily. Gaddis professed his love for her and proposed marriage. The intervenor became very much infatuated with Gaddis and accepted his proposal of marriage. She then told him that Rance held a deed to her home as security, and Gaddis told her that Rance would beat her out of her property, and that since he was going to marry her, he wished to have the property in his name, and that he would protect the property and herself and Rance. The intervenor believed the promises of Gaddis, and, at his insistent demands, arranged a meeting of the two of them and Rance at the office of attorney Dahms. This meeting was held as arranged, on August 3, 1934, and at it Gaddis assured those present that if Rance would convey the property to him he would hold it as trustee for the intervenor and Rance, and that as soon as he and the intervenor returned from their wedding trip to Minneapolis he would pay Rance the $1,100 and interest which the intervenor was owing him. Relying upon the representations of Gaddis, and having faith in the intervenor, Rance agreed to this and at once executed and delivered to Gad-dis a warranty deed, prepared by Dahms, conveying the property to Gaddis. Revenue stamps to the amount of $7 were affixed to the deed. No money or other consideration passed from Gaddis to either Rance or the intervenor at this meeting. The deed was filed for record on the day of its execution. That evening Gaddis and the intervenor went to Minneapolis in the former’s automobile. Arriving at Minneapolis at an early morning hour, on Saturday, August 4th, they registered as Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gaddis, and immediately went to a room and went to bed. They continued in this relationship at the hotel until Monday afternoon, when they returned by automobile and arrived at Cedar Rapids on the morning of August 7th. They were not married on this trip. The next day, according to the testimony of the intervenor, Gaddis stated to her that it would look better for him, as a business man, if he also held title to her household goods. These had cost her in excess of $4,000. She had a dining room set for which she had paid $1,800, a bedroom suite costing $1,000, and a radio for which she spent $700. *535 On August 8, 1934, she executed a bill of sale conveying to Gaddis, “all my household goods and chattels now owned by me or located” in her home. She carried fire insurance for $10,000 on this personal property. He filed it for record at 4 o’clock p. m. on the same day. The intervenor testified that he paid her nothing for this property. Gaddis, at once, became active in seeking to procure a mortgage loan on the residence property. He first sought a loan at Waterloo. On August 10, 1934, he made written application to the appellant, Perpetual Savings & Loan Association, for a loan of $5,000 on this property. He also agreed to take fifty shares of stock in the association. In the application he stated that the property had been purchased in 1934 for $9,000 and that he had received wages in 1933 of $10,000. He testified that he filed no income tax return in 1934 for the year 1933 as he did not make enough above his exemptions. The appellant association’s committee appraised the property at $6,800 and recommended a loan of $4,500. The application was accepted and on August 11, 1934, Gaddis executed a mortgage and note to the appellant association for $4,500, which was filed for record by it on August 13, 1934. The intervenor testified that she never gave Gaddis the abstract, but that he took it from her home. The next morning, Ranee saw the report of the mortgage in the daily report published by the Linn County Abstract Company, and telephoned the intervenor that Gaddis had placed a $4,500 mortgage on her residence. She immediately went to the office of Attorney Dahms and told him of the mortgage. Both she and Dahms testified that the latter at once telephoned the appellant association to ascertain about the mortgage and one of its officers informed Dahms that it was true and that it had paid Gaddis $2,000 of the loan. Dahms then told the officer that he was giving the association notice for the intervenor that the property did not belong to Gaddis, that he had paid no consideration for it, that the intervenor was at all times in possession of it, and that he was giving the association fair warning so it could protect itself, and that if it paid another cent on the mortgage it would do so at its peril. The association had paid Gaddis $500 on August 11th, $1,500 on August 13th. After the claimed telephone notice from Dahms, it paid out the balance of $2,500 less some items of expense, to Gaddis on August 18, *536

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Bluebook (online)
284 N.W. 468, 226 Iowa 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rance-v-gaddis-iowa-1939.