Short v. Anderson

8 N.W.2d 740, 233 Iowa 238
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 6, 1943
DocketNo. 46147.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 N.W.2d 740 (Short v. Anderson) 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
Short v. Anderson, 8 N.W.2d 740, 233 Iowa 238 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Plaintiff-appellants, Steve Short and Cora Short, are husband and wife; Cora Short and defendant-appellee, Lily Anderson, are sisters, and George W. Hall, defendant on cross-petition, was their brother. He died after the trial below and before appeal, and R. B. Hawkins, administrator of his estate, has been substituted as defendant on cross-petition. Defendantappellee, Lily Anderson, is also named as defendant in her capac *240 ity as administratrix of the estate of her husband, H. S. Anderson, who died in 1939. We shall refer to her in her dual capacity as ‘ ‘ defendant-appellees. ’ ’

The pleadings cover some fifty pages of the printed abstract. The issues will be stated, so far as necessary, as we proceed with the opinion.

George W. Hall never married. On and prior to January 7, 1921, he lived in Oregon, while his sister, defendant-appellee Lily Anderson, and her husband, lived on a farm in Ringgold County, Iowa. On or about that date Hall loaned them $3,500 and took a mortgage on their farm to secure same. About June 1, 1923, he came back to Iowa and lived at the Anderson home until 1936, except for an interval from 1927 to 1929 when he was again in Oregon. From the beginning it was orally agreed he was to pay a reasonable charge for board, room, and care.

Defendant-appellees claim he never paid anything for these services during all that time and that the $3,500 indebtedness is paid, partly in cash and partly by those services.

On or about May 7, 1935, a written agreement was entered into between H. S. Anderson and Hall by the terms of which Hall was to pay $25 per month for his board and room “for the time that the party of the second part, George W. Hall, has made his home with the party of the first part.” It also provided for ‘ ‘ a reasonable allowance, for any extra services rendered * * * during any illness or other disability * *

Thereafter, on November 13th of the same year (1935), the note and mortgage sued on by plaintiffs were executed by Mr. and Mrs. Anderson to Hall. They represented the same indebtedness for which the note and mortgage of January 7, 1921, were given. The earlier mortgage was not released of record. Defendant-appellees claim this new note and mortgage were made with the understanding that the agreement of May 7, 1935, for board and room and extra services was to stand; that by oversight, credits amounting to $1,100 which were endorsed on the original note of January 7, 1921, were not allowed in drawing the new note and mortgage; and that the new papers were made for the purpose of keeping the original debt from being barred by the statute of limitations, and in order that a final settlement be *241 tween the parties could be made at a later date when the real amount due would be determined.

Plaintiff-appellants deny all but the execution of the new note and mortgage, urge the incompetence of any parol evidence to vary the terms of those instruments, and claim the execution of the new papers in legal effect constituted a settlement between the parties thereto which now precludes any claim by defendantappellees for Mr. Hall’s board and care under the agreement of May 7, 1935.

Hall left the Anderson home in 1936 and went to' live with plaintiff-appellants. On October 23, 1937, he and they made a written agreement for his care and support for life under which he gave them in payment a tract of land in Oregon (later sold for $2,400), a $3,000 mortgage of one George B. Anderson, son of defendant-appellees (which has since been paid in full), and the note and mortgage in suit, which he assigned to them the same date. Plaintiff-appellants claim to be holders of this paper in due course.

It appears that on or about August 24, 1939, H. S. Anderson conveyed by warranty deed to Mrs. Anderson, defendantappellee, the land covered by this mortgage. Said deed recited a consideration of one dollar and provided that the premises were free from encumbrances ‘ ‘ except' one mortgage. ’ ’ Plaintiff-appellants claim this referred to the $3,500 mortgage and that by accepting it the grantee estopped herself from denying and contesting the validity and existence of said mortgage and from making any defense to this suit. Plaintiff-appellants also contend that any claim of defendant-appellees against Hall for board prior to September 1, 1929, was in 1935 barred by the statute of limitations and that the agreement of May 7, 1935, did not revive it.

We shall attempt, as we proceed, to dispose of these various questions of law and fact so far as necessary to a decision of the case.

I. Plaintiff-appellants, by pleading and in argument, claim they became holders, in due course of the note and mortgage sued on.

Section 9512, Iowa Code 1939, states what constitutes a “holder in due course.” Among other requirements, the holder *242 must have taken the instrument “in good faith and for value,” and must have “had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it.”

Mrs. Short denies having had knowledge of the transactions between Hall and the Andersens when the assignment of note and mortgage was made to her and her husband. George Anderson testifies that he talked it over with plaintiff-appellant Steve Short in the spring of 1937:

“I talked to Steve Short, one of the plaintiffs in this case, with reference to the indebtedness of George Hall, to my father and mother. That was in the spring of 1937, after he went there the summer before. * * * I told him I thought we could get Mr. Hall and my parents together concerning a settlement, and he thought so, too, and he agreed to bring him up and we would try and get them together * * *. The indebtedness I was talking about was concerning Mr. William Hall’s board.”

This affirmative evidence is uncontradicted in the record. Furthermore, it is consistent with the relationship of the parties and the circumstances generally. The record does not disclose much as to the visiting back and forth of the Short and Anderson families but there is no evidence of any unfriendliness.

Plaintiff-appellant Short was called as a witness by defendant-appellees. On cross-examination he indicates his visiting at the Anderson place while Hall was there was confined to Sundays. Mrs. Short testified the families lived quite far apart and she visited there about once a year while Hall was there.

On cross-examination by his own attorney Mr. Short testifies that when the papers between the Shorts and Hall were drawn “he [Hall] told me he thought — he figured his interest and what work he done there would a good deal over-pay them.” Mrs. Short was present. It was evidently the subject of discussion. This was some months after the conversation between Short and George Anderson we have already referred to.

■ There may be some significance also in the fact, of which plaintiff-appellants had constructive notice at least, that the original mortgage remained unsatisfied of record.

On the question of consideration it is clear the assignment *243

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.W.2d 740, 233 Iowa 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/short-v-anderson-iowa-1943.