Suntken v. Suntken

272 N.W. 132, 223 Iowa 347
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 16, 1937
DocketNo. 43797.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 132 (Suntken v. Suntken) 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
Suntken v. Suntken, 272 N.W. 132, 223 Iowa 347 (iowa 1937).

Opinions

Anderson, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Wright County in August, 1935, and was upon a promissory note executed by the defendant, Enno Suntken, dated September 3, 1931, and due March 1, 1933. The defendant in his answer admitted the execution of the note in suit and admitted that but for the amount due defendant on his counterclaim there would be due to plaintiff on said promissory note the amount thereof with accrued interest. The defendant then set up a counterclaim claiming against the plaintiff amounts due for board, room, and washing and for horse feed and barn room, the two items aggregating $2,950.94. Later, and the day before the *348 commencement of the trial, the defendant amended his answer and counterclaim increasing the total amount of his counterclaim to $3,464.84, and also claiming that a part of the consideration for the note in suit was the plaintiff’s promise to pay a $2,000 note of the defendant’s which was payable to one Tenus Johnson; that the plaintiff, John J. Suntken, did not pay the said Tenus Johnson note in accordance with said promise and that the defendant was later compelled to pay $2,250 to discharge the same, and that by reason thereof there was a partial failure of the consideration for plaintiff’s note. The facts are quite complicated and controverted and it will be necessary to attempt quite a full statement in order that the issues presented on this appeal may be the better understood.

It appears that at the time the incidents herein related occurred the Suntken family consisted of Onno Suntken, the father, John J. Suntken, the plaintiff, Enno Suntken, the defendant, and Fred Suntken, brothers and sons of Onno, and a daughter, Grace Dirksen. For the purpose of brevity we will refer to the various members of this family by their first names in this opinion.

In February, 1925, the father, Onno, having lost his wife, ceased his farming operations and had a sale of the personal property upon what is known in the record as the home farm. The defendant, Enno, purchased at this sale property of the conceded value of $1,731. Enno then moved upon the home place as a tenant and his father continued to live with him there. The son, Fred, worked.for his brother Enno on the farm as a hired hand, and the plaintiff, John J., also made his home there with his brother Enno. John J. seems to have taken care of his father’s business, to some extent at least, and after the sale above mentioned took up the matter of Enno’s indebtedness to his father and a promissory note was executed by Enno payable to his father for either $4,000 or $4,180, Enno claiming it was for $4,000 even. No witness other than the two brothers testifies as to the exact amount of this note, Enno claims that at the time of the execution of this note the consideration therefor was the $1,731 due his father on account of the property Enno had purchased at the public sale and John J. ’s promise to pay a certain $2,000 note owed by Enno to one Tenus Johnson. Enno claimed that at that time there was $2,269 due on the Tenus Johnson note and that together with the sale account of $1,731 totaled *349 the amount of $4,000 for which the note was given to his father; and he claimed that John J. had said to him if he would include the amount due on the Tenus Johnson note in the note that was being executed to the father that he (John J.) would pay the Tenus Johnson note. Tenus Johnson testifies that there was never $269 accrued interest on the $2,000 note of Enno which he held. It should be noted here that John J. was a surety on the Tenus Johnson note. John J. disputes the testimony of Enno as to the consideration for the $4,000 or $4,180 note payable to the father and claims that nothing was said at the time the father’s note was made in reference to the Tenus Johnson note or the payment thereof. John J. claims that Enno owed his father at that time other and additional amounts over and above the amount of the property purchased by Enno at his father’s sale which, together with the amount of the sale, totaled $4,180. He claims the additional amount was made up of money borrowed by Enno from his father when Enno commenced farming operations, and the purchase price of a corn picker, $350, about 800 bushels of corn, 1800 bushels of oats, a quantity of hay, and some other items; that the corn at that time was worth about $1.00 per bushel and oats $.50 per bushel, and that all of these items were totaled up and computed and amounted to $4,180, and that a note for that amount was then given by Enno to his father. Enno admits getting the corn, oats and hay, but claims these items were in exchange for grain that he had delivered to an elevator and for which his brother John J. or his father obtained the returns. Enno admits in his testimony, however, that at the time the $4,000 note was executed he did owe his father for additional, “stuff” including $350 for a com picker. Enno also claims that at the end of the first year he was on the home he paid his father $450 and at the end of the second year he says, “I had some old debts and made some further payments of $200 or $250 on the old account, corn picker and such stuff. Three hundred dollars and more was for the corn picker and there was little other debts.” It must be concluded from this testimony that at the time the note to the father was executed Enno was indebted to him in excess of $600, not considering the 800 bushels of corn and 1800 bushels of oats and a quantity of hay, which Enno admits he received from his father, but which he claims was in exchange for grain he had sent to an elevator from another farm he was on, but insists that the other items of indebt *350 edness he admits he owed his father at the time of the execution of the note of $4,000 or $4,180 were not included in the amount of the note but that the amount of the note consisted only of the $1,731 sale account, and the amount of the Tenus Johnson note. Matters remained in the situation above detailed until September, 1931. At this time John J. appeared with the father’s note and told Enno that the father had given the brother Fred and John J., Enno’s note and asked Enno to execute two new notes, one payable to the brother Fred for $2,000, and one payable to John J. for $2,000; and John J. claims that he agreed to and did throw off the $180 balance of the father’s note. At any rate, two new notes were made for $2,000 each payable to John J. and Fred, respectively, and the old note was surrendered to Enno. Enno claims the old note was lost but insists it was for $4,000 instead of $4,180 as claimed by John J. At the same time the Tenus Johnson note which- remained unpaid was renewed and nothing was said by either of the parties as to the claimed promise of John J. to pay that note. About two years after these notes were executed to John J. and Fred, the father having died in the meantime, there seems to have been a serious break in the relations between Enno and his two brothers, John J. and Fred, and John J. left the home of Enno and in August, 1935, two years later, commenced this action upon his $2,000 note, and the defenses thereto, which we have heretofore mentioned, were interposed by the defendant, Enno.

The Tenus Johnson note was not paid and he brought action thereon against Enno and Enno was compelled to pay a judgment rendered thereon in the approximate sum of $2,250, and Enno claims that there was a failure of consideration in the father’s note by reason of the fact that'John J.

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Bluebook (online)
272 N.W. 132, 223 Iowa 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suntken-v-suntken-iowa-1937.