Robertson v. Renshaw

261 N.W. 645, 220 Iowa 572
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 21, 1935
DocketNo. 42956.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 261 N.W. 645 (Robertson v. Renshaw) 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
Robertson v. Renshaw, 261 N.W. 645, 220 Iowa 572 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

Mrs. Helen Moore, surviving spouse of Henry G. Moore, deceased, died intestate on March 15, 1934, leaving at the time of her death as her sole surviving children the defendants, Mae Leget, Maude Boyce, Florence Klinger, and Margaret Benshaw. The plaintiffs Edith Moore Bobertson and Irene Moore Hall are the only children of Henry Moore, Jr., son of Helen Moore who had predeceased her. On September 21, 1931, Helen Moore was the owner of the northeast quarter of section 18, township 90, range 37 west of the Fifth P. M. in Buena Vista county, Iowa, she having obtained title to said quarter section by deed from her husband prior to his death. On this date, to wit, September 21, 1931, Helen Moore-signed and acknowledged three separate warranty deeds, identified in the record and introduced in evidence as Exhibits 1, 2, and 3. The grantees in Exhibit 1 for 80 acres of said land are Mae Moore Leget and Maude Moore Boyce. The grantee in Exhibit'2 for 4Ó acres thereof is Florence Moore Klinger. The grantee in Exhibit 3 for 40 acres of said real estate is Marguerite Moore Benshaw. These several grantees are the same identical persons as the defendants in this action. At the time of her death, these deeds were found in a safety deposit box in the Citizens First National *574 Bank of Storm Lake, Iowa, which box had been leased by said bank to Helen Moore, she being a customer of said bank, and said box had been held by her under lease for some time. The banker testified that when a box is rented two duplicate customer’s keys are delivered to the customer and a master key is retained by the bank, and that it requires both a customer’s key and the master key to enter the box. The box cannot be entered in any other way. He further testified that during her lifetime no one else would have access to this box except Mrs. Helen Moore. After the death of Mrs. Helen Moore, these four defendants appeared at the bank with the customer’s key, and Mr. Balph E. Sheffield, vice president and trust officer of said bank, opened the safety deposit box of Helen Moore and made out an inventory of what was therein contained, including the three deeds in question, and took a receipt which contained a written agreement indemnifying the bank and holding it harmless on account of delivering said deeds to said defendants, which was signed by all four of said defendants. The deeds were then taken by them and placed on record, and bear the filing stamp of the recorder’s office of date of March 19, 1934, just four days after the death of Helen Moore, the grantor named in said deeds.

The only question involved in this case is the question of the delivery of these deeds. There is no question of undue influence or mental competency. The plaintiffs rest their case upon the naked legal question, contending that there was no delivery. The appellees in support of the decree of the lower court contend that there is a presumption of delivery from the fact that the recorded deeds were produced at the trial by the appellees and that the burden was on the plaintiffs to overcome by satisfactory proof this presumption of delivery. They also contend that the presumption is supported by other extrinsic evidence bearing on the question of intent to deliver. The testimony is quite brief. The circumstances surrounding the execution of these instruments, as related by Mr. Earl Leget, husband of one of the grantees, is to the effect that he and his wife, Mae Leget, were living at Storm Lake in September, 1931, with Mrs. Helen Moore at her home. He says: “I took Mrs. Mftore down town in my car that day. She got out at the bank corner, at Schaller’s bank. She went alone. ¥e waited for her because she told us we could pick her up at the bank corner again, then we took her home that same day.

*575 “Q. Did you have any conversation — did you hear any conversation that day after you had gotten Mrs. Moore in the car at the bank corner? Did you hear any conversation between Mrs. Moore and Mrs. Leget? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you take any part in that conversation? A. No, sir.
! 1Q. Will you state what the conversation was ? ’ ’

Over the objection that the witness, being the husband of one of the defendants and an interested party, was incompetent under the so-called Dead Man’s Statute (Code 1931, section 11257), and that the conversation itself was incompetent, immaterial, irrelevant, and hearsay, the witness stated: “Why, Mrs. Moore told Mrs. Leget that she had the deeds all made out and that each girl was to get a forty. She made the south 80 out in partnership between Maude and Mae Leget and the other two forties was deeded separately to Margaret Renshaw and Florence Klinger. ’ ’

Another witness for defendants, a Mrs. Lucy Bowers, a resident of Storm Lake, testified to the effect that she was acquainted with Helen Moore and lived diagonally across the street from her for something like sixteen years, and that they visited back and forth. She was then asked whether she ever had any conversation or talk with Mrs. Moore about the disposition of this quarter section of land, to which she gave an affirmative answer. She was then asked to relate the substance of the first conversation in regard to the disposition of said land. It appears that this conversation took «place during the winter of 1930 and 1931; that in this conversation Mrs. Moore told her that she expected to leave 40 acres to each one of the daughters; that she was leaving to Mae Leget the 40 with the buildings on because she had no home. “Later she told me that Maude, meaning Mrs. Boyce, had lost her place and that she had changed her mind and was leaving eighty acres with the home buildings to Maude and Mae jointly, that she had deeded it to them. That was later when she was at Mrs. Colby’s house and it was a year ago last winter.

“Q. What did she say about the other two forties of that quarter section ? A. She was leaving a forty to each of her other daughters, Mrs. Klinger and Mrs. Renshaw.
‘ ‘ Q. Did she say she had deeded it to them ? ’ ’

*576 Over the objection that the question was leading1 and suggestive and that it is incompetent and hearsay, the witness answered: “Yes, she said she had deeded, that was the term or expression she used, to them.

“Q. Who do you refer to when you refer to ‘them’? A. Well, to the daughters, to her four daughters. The eighty to Mrs. Leget and the forty to Mrs. Klinger, and forty to Mrs. Renshaw — eighty to Mrs. Leget and Mrs. Boyce. ’ ’

Another witness, Inez Cutshall, testified that she was living in Spencer in the years 1931 and 1932 and that she knew Helen Moore; that Helen Moore resided at her home for a period of time from October, 1933, to the latter part of January, 1934; that she stayed there continuously; that she discussed with the witness the disposition of this quarter section of real estate. She was then asked :

‘ ‘ Q. Did she say to you as to whether or not she had made any disposition of that farm? A. Yes, sir.
‘ ‘ Q. What did she tell you ? A. She said she had her business affairs settled. She said she had deeds made out for that farm to her four daughters and that at her death they would receive the farm.

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Bluebook (online)
261 N.W. 645, 220 Iowa 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-renshaw-iowa-1935.