Richardson v. Estle

243 N.W. 611, 214 Iowa 1007
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 1932
DocketNo. 41041.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 243 N.W. 611 (Richardson v. Estle) 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
Richardson v. Estle, 243 N.W. 611, 214 Iowa 1007 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Evans, J.

E. M. Rex and Alice Rex are husband and wife. John Estle is the father of Mrs. Rex. In April 1926 one Miller, Receiver of an insolvent National Bank, obtained a judgment in Greene County against the defendants Rex for approximately $8000. The plaintiff became the purported owner of this judgment by assignment from the Receiver in December 1927. In the same month Mrs. Rex conveyed to her father the last remnant of her property and her husband joined therein. This property consisted of an undivided one-sixth interest in a four-hundred twenty-five acre tract of land situated in Muscatine County. Estle was a resident of Dallas Center. The Rexes were residents of Grinnell. They were heavily indebted and were insolvent. It was for this reason that the Receiver assigned the claim which he -held against them to a better collector than himself. One of their largest creditors was the father, John Estle, defendant herein. He had signed notes with them, either as surety or guarantor, to an amount in excess of $22,000. Two of these notes had been paid by him. The required payment by him of the other two notes was inevitable. In December 1927 he visited his daughter and her husband at their home at Grinnell and their financial relations were talked over. It was at that time agreed between them that the daughter and her husband would convey to him the Muscatine County real estate and that he would credit them with the value of such real estate upon the indebtedness due him. They went together to the office of Attorney Rayburn at Grinnell for the purpose of making the con *1009 veyanee. When they got there they found that they were unable to give the scrivener a proper description of the property. • The matter of conveyance was therefore postponed, with the understanding that when Estle returned to his home at Dallas Center, he would send the correct description to the Rexes and that they should then make the conveyance. It was also understood, that the conveyance when made should be sent for record to Muscatine County with directions to the Recorder to forward the recorded deed to John Estle at Dallas Center. After his return home, Estle sent to his daughter the correct description of the real estate, whereupon she and her husband went again- to the office of Attorney Rayburn and executed the conveyance pursuant to the agreement. This was on December 31, 1927, and such was the date of the deed. There was a short delay before the deed was sent to Muscatine County. December 31 was Saturday. On January 5, E. M. Rex mailed to the Recorder of Muscatine County the deed in question accompanied with a letter of advice which directed the Recorder to record and to return the recorded deed to John Estle at Dallas Center. The County Recorder noted the filing of the deed as of January 7, at 9:00 A.M. He then returned the deed by mail pursuant to directions to John Estle at Dallas Center.

After the acquisition of his judgment, the plaintiff caused a transcript of the same to be filed in Muscatine County. This was done on January 6, 1928. His attitude is that his judgment-lien attached to the -real estate of the defendant Alice Rex before a' delivery of .her deed to her father had been accomplished. It is the major contention of the appellant that the delivery of the deed to John Estle was not accomplished until he had received it from the Muscatine County Recorder. His alternative contention is that in any event effective delivery of the deed was not accomplished until it was received by the Muscatine County Recorder; that therefore his judgment lien should be' deemed prior- and superior to the warranty deed. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the deed was presumed to be delivered on the date of its execution. On the face of the record, therefore, the judgment did not attach as a lien to such realty. The judgment-lien could not attach to any real estate not owned by the- judgment-debtor at the time of filing of the transcript. ’ The issue is not strictly one of priority of liens. The plaintiff either has a *1010 priority of lien, or lie has no lien at all. The plaintiff served notice of this action on the last day of July 1928. In the meantime, and so far as appears, without any notice of any claim of lien by the plaintiff, Estle paid the consideration for his deed by cancelling and delivering to Alice Rex her three notes for $2000, $3000 and $7000 respectively. These notes had been paid to the holders thereof by Estle as surety thereon. He delivered them all to his daughter in payment for the real estate. It was stipulated at the trial that the value of such real estate was approximately $3200. The defendant Estle was still liable as surety upon another note for $10,000. This real estate had been inherited by Alice Rex from her mother, who had died some five or six years previously. The distributive share of the defendant Estle therein had never been set apart. He had, however, been in the possession of the entire tract and was in possession at the time of the transaction under consideration. It will be seen from the foregoing that the issue is a very narrow one. It was arrived at in the district court somewhat progressively.

The plaintiff’s original petition was in two counts. The first eount presented the facts chronologically, and apparently predicated the claim for relief upon the priority of the filing of the transcript over the date of the recording of the deed. The second count pleaded that the deed was executed for the purpose of hindering and defrauding the creditors of the grantor. Such were the issues tendered when the case came on for trial.

At the close of the evidence, and after both parties had rested, the plaintiff filed an amendment to his petition wherein he charged that the deed had not been delivered until after the filing of plaintiff’s transcript of judgment. This is the single issue that is presented here. The claim of fraud was abandoned. Nor is it claimed that the mere priority of date of filing the transcript over the date of recording the deed is of itself decisive. Under the issue the burden was, and is, upon the plaintiff to prove affirmatively that the deed had not been delivered prior to January 6. The plaintiff formally concedes that delivery of a deed is largely a question of intention and that it may be implied from facts and circumstances clearly evincing an intent to deliver; yet his argument is largely based upon the assumption that somewhere and in some way, some formality must be found at some point of time whereby the delivery becomes com *1011 píete. In ordinary business transactions involving mutual obligations undertaken by both parties, dispute between them over the question of delivery is virtually non-existent. Where, pursuant to preceding agreement, instruments are executed, their delivery is implied. The execution of a deed of real estate pursuant to a previous agreement therefor simply perfects an equitable ownership already acquired by such preceding agreement. The failure of a formal conveyance or delivery does not necessarily defeat the equitable ownership. The particular field of law wherein the question of delivery often becomes controlling and decisive, is that relating to gifts. Contracts involving mutual obligations are usually executory. But gifts are not executory. A promise to make a gift is not enforceable. A gift to be valid must be complete. Delivery therefore is legally essential to the completed gift. In the development of the law on that subject, formality has been discarded, as not essential to the proof.

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Bluebook (online)
243 N.W. 611, 214 Iowa 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-estle-iowa-1932.