Staly v. McNerney

10 N.W.2d 584, 233 Iowa 1065
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 27, 1943
DocketNo. 46276.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 584 (Staly v. McNerney) 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
Staly v. McNerney, 10 N.W.2d 584, 233 Iowa 1065 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

*1067 Hale, J.

Mrs. Eva Esther McNerney, the defendant, is the widow of William Thomas McNerney, who died October 12, 1940. Decedent in his will devised to her a ninety-acre farm in Polk county, south of Des Moines. The farm originally consisted of one hundred and thirty acres, of which the south forty acres were devised to a son. Plaintiff, W. E. Staly, was the owner under contract from Westons of two houses situated on one lot and known as 1111 and 1113 Pennsylvania Avenue, in Des Moines, and deed therefor from the Westons to Staly, of date February 11, 1942, was recorded February 13, 1942.

Final report in the estate of William Thomas McNerney filed March 19, 1942, and the supplemental final report, filed April 13, 1942, were approved on the same day. While proceedings in the estate were pending, and about June 1941, Mrs. McNerney employed L. E. Gooding to dispose of the ninety-acre farm devised to her. Gooding died before the institution of this suit. Gooding first talked to J. O. Staly with reference to town property in trade for the farm and through J. O. Staly came into contact with Staly’s son, W. E. Staly, the plaintiff herein, who was at that time .a resident of Webster City. On June 26, 1941, W. E. Staly came to Des Moines and went to his father’s house. On the same day Gooding, the agent, called for defendant, and after first driving past the houses on Pennsylvania Avenue, showed her some houses located near the fairgrounds. Defendant was not. interested in the latter houses and was then taken by the agent to the residence of J. O. Staly, and defendant, Gooding, and J. O. Staly went to the Pennsylvania Avenue houses and defendant inspected them. Apparently all parties were satisfied to make the exchange, and the agent Gooding and the defendant then proceeded with the plaintiff to the office of defendant’s attorney, Clarence I. Spencer, where contract was executed between plaintiff' and defendant by which Mrs. McNerney agreed to exchange the ninety-acre farm for the Pennsylvania Avenue houses and $750, $500 of which was paid on the execution of the contract and the balance of $250 to be paid on March 1, 1942, with deeds to be executed on that date. The contract contained the usual provisions that the properties were to be free from liens and encumbrances, and *1068 taxes paid by each owner, and that the time of payment of the sum of money, interest, and taxes was the essence of the contract, and in default of compliance the agreement should be void and of no effect.

Out of the fund received by defendant as down payment she paid the agent Gooding his commission on the day following execution of the contract.

On June 27th, through Gooding, acting as his agent, W. E. Staly, by his father, J. O. Staly, sold to Walter Ferguson, the intervener herein, the ninety acres for which he had contracted with Mrs. McNerney. The sale of the farm was known to the defendant, arid later, in the month of July, she permitted Ferguson to make improvements on the farm, paint the buildings, and in consideration of the sum of $25 gave him the keys to the house and sold him the stalk pasture. , From that time on Ferguson looked after the place and made various improvements of about $1,000 in value, according to his own testimony.

Later there was some question by the various attorneys as to the title to the different properties and the. abstracts were finally exchanged in February 1942. On March 1, 1942, defendant took possession of the two- houses she had contracted to buy from Staly, but was, or became, dissatisfied, claiming that the agent had misinformed her about the value of the properties and their rental. She claimed she had been informed their rental was $30 per month for each house, but actually each house was rented for $20 per 'month. However, she collected the rent from the tenants from March 1, 1942, up until the time of the trial.

On April 16, 1942, dissatisfied with the contract, Mrs. McNerney served on the plaintiff, W. E. Staly, a notice that she rescinded the contract of June 26, 1941, and in writing offered and -tendered the $500 received and to restore the status quo, alleging as a reason, failure and lack of consideration and fraud and misrepresentation. The intervener, Walter Ferguson, in his contract of June 27, 1941, had agreed to pay $5,000 for the property, of which he paid $500 in cash and the balance to be paid upon execution of warranty deed and delivery of abstract on March 1, 1942. On April 23, 1942, plaintiff filed *1069 a petition reciting the terms of the contract and offering to pay the balance of $250 to defendant and asking that title be quieted in him and .demanding delivery ,o£ the warranty deed «xtd abstract. In an amendment to his petition plaintiff set out the fact of defendant’s entry into possession, her knowledge of the sale to Ferguson and her permission to Ferguson to take possession of the farm and make improvements thereon, and claimed estoppel. On June 6, 1942, Ferguson filed petition of intervention and to' this defendant filed answer claiming fraud, misrepresentation by plaintiff through his agent; who was acting for both parties, and so great a difference in the value of the properties contracted to be exchanged that the. contract was unconscionable. She alleged failure to deliver abstract by Staly showing merchantable title and failure of defendant to discover fraud until March 1942, and set up the rescission above referred to with tender. Defendant also filed a cross-petition against plaintiff and Ferguson, intervener, on substantially the same grounds. Answer to the cross-petition, by way of denial and claim for damages, was filed by intervener, further pleading ratification and estoppel of defendant. Answers by the plaintiff to the intervener’s petition and amendments, and reply by way of denial on the part of defendant, were also filed.

On September 24, 1942, the cause came on for trial, and on October 13, 1942, the court rendered its decree setting out the execution of the contract and finding as follows: That if there had- been fraud upon defendant she was in a position to discover such fraud but was not diligent and did not investigate, although she had sufficient opportunity for a long period of time after she had entered into the contract, and did not do so until on and after the settlement date and after the relations between the plaintiff and intervener had been materially changed; that she had no cause or right to rescind the contract and did not tender to plaintiff or intervener restitution of consideration already paid or expended by intervener for improvements made with the knowledge and consent of defendant; that there was no -fraud on the part of Ferguson and that defendant knew of the existence of the contract between plaintiff and intervener *1070

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.W.2d 584, 233 Iowa 1065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staly-v-mcnerney-iowa-1943.