Zach Thielen and Tatiana Y. Thielen v. Randall E. Anderson and Rebecca S. Anderson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 25, 2023
Docket22-0458
StatusPublished

This text of Zach Thielen and Tatiana Y. Thielen v. Randall E. Anderson and Rebecca S. Anderson (Zach Thielen and Tatiana Y. Thielen v. Randall E. Anderson and Rebecca S. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Zach Thielen and Tatiana Y. Thielen v. Randall E. Anderson and Rebecca S. Anderson, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0458 Filed January 25, 2023

ZACH THIELEN and TATIANA Y. THIELEN, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

RANDALL E. ANDERSON and REBECCA S. ANDERSON, Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Cass County, James S. Heckerman,

Judge.

The Thielens appeal the dismissal of their action to partition jointly owned

real estate. REVERSED AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEEDINGS.

Jonathan Mailander of Mailander Law Office, Atlantic, for appellants.

Blake C. Miller of Crary, Huff, Ringgenberg, Hartnett & Storm, P.C., Sioux

City, for appellees.

Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Greer and Schumacher, JJ. 2

GREER, Judge.

On October 1, 2013, Jean Wolfe deeded Cass County property to Tatiana

Anderson, now Thielen, and her father and mother, Randall and Rebecca

Anderson, as tenants with full rights of survivorship.1 With a desire to sell her

interest in the residential real estate, Tatiana and her husband, Zach Thielen,2

petitioned for a partition by sale of the property in June 2021. But, focusing on the

equitable interests of the parties in the real estate, the Andersons asserted Tatiana

was not a joint owner and, thus, could not accomplish her goal. The district court

agreed and dismissed the partition action, directing the Andersons to pursue their

action to quiet title. The Thielens appeal from that dismissal. We reverse the

dismissal of the partition action and remand for further proceedings.

The Andersons claim they purchased the Cass County property for $7000

and Tatiana paid nothing toward the purchase price. Tatiana concedes those

facts. In what became the fighting issue, the property was purchased purportedly

as part of an estate plan, and the Andersons and their son, who also testified,

intended that Tatiana inherit a full interest in the property when the parents died.

Other real estate would go to the other Anderson siblings under a similar plan. Yet

1 As one of our panels described: “Joint tenancy property is property held by two or more parties jointly, with equal rights to share in the enjoyment of the whole property during their lives, and a right of survivorship which allows the surviving party to enjoy the entire estate.” “Thus, a joint tenant owns an undivided interest in the entire estate to which is attached the right of survivorship.” Grout v. Sickels, No. 21-0556, 2022 WL 610439, at *3, (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 2, 2022) (citations omitted), further review granted (June 3, 2022). 2 Tatiana and Zach were married in 2016. His only interest in the property is one

of dower. 3

in their pleadings, the Andersons noted that the “warranty deed to the Property

named Defendant Randall Anderson, Defendant Rebecca Anderson, and Tatiana

as one-third joint tenants with rights of survivorship.” Thus, the question becomes

does Tatiana have a present interest in the property as the deed suggests or a

future interest in the property as the Andersons claim was supposed to be the plan.

Complicating matters, when the property was purchased, there was a house

on the lot, which was in a poor condition. The Andersons estimated they spent

more than $22,000 to repair and replace the roof.3 Tatiana contributed nothing.

The same arrangement occurred over the interior remodel—the Andersons paid

for it, Tatiana did not. All in all, the Andersons testified they expended more than

$61,000 toward the purchase price, real estate taxes, insurance, and maintenance

of the property. Tatiana contributed nothing. Yet, Tatiana did do hands-on

maintenance on the home even though she never lived there. Other than the

written real estate deed, there are no writings clarifying the arrangement between

the parties concerning this real estate and responsibility for any expenditures.

In the dismissal ruling, the district court described an intent by Tatiana and

her parents that “Tatiana [not] have an actual present ownership interest in the

Real Estate as a joint tenant, but that solely Randall and Rebecca owned and were

responsible for the Real Estate.” The court echoed the estate plan described by

the Andersons and noted the “understanding” was that the parents would leave

the real estate to Tatiana only at their deaths.4 Because the district court found

3 The Andersons also converted the home into a duplex and lived there off and on during the years since the purchase. 4 The district court noted evidence of the use of the property and payments for

improvements “corroborates” the Andersons’ intention. 4

that the Thielens had no current interest in the property, they were not entitled to

any relief under the partition action. The court then directed the Andersons to file

an action to quiet title, indicating that title needed to be “clarified.”

In other words, contrary to the written documentation, the district court found

that the intent of the parties was that Tatiana not have a present interest in the

property but only an interest after the death of her parents. To that end, the district

court reformed the deed to express the real intent of the parties and ruled that

neither Thielen had an interest in the property. But to achieve a reformation of the

deed, the Andersons had the burden to show that a mutual mistake of a material

fact was made in the written instrument. See Westcott v. Westcott, 259 N.W.2d

545, 548 (Iowa Ct. App. 1977). And “[o]ne who contends a writing does not

express the real agreement between the parties or who seeks reformation of a

contract has the burden of establishing his contentions by clear, satisfactory and

convincing proof.” Id. at 547–48. Here, there is no mutual mistake over the terms

of the deed. When asked about Tatiana’s legal ownership interest in the property,

Randall characterized her current interest as “[a] third owner, yes.” Likewise,

Randall was not so clear as to any agreement between the Andersons and

Tatiana. As far as any specific agreement over the property ownership, Randall

said:

I recall conversations, but nothing in writing, nothing concrete. You know how a family just gets together and they talk about their inheritance? We have our farm, we have this and we have that and things were talked about. I know one son, Ethan, wanted my muzzle loader, so I jokingly—you could have my muzzle loader. You know, just different things we just—as a family we joked around, but there was nothing serious as far as getting it in writing.

Moreover, Tatiana understood the deed to give her a current interest. She testified 5

Q. Can you describe how it came to be that you and your parents took title to this property? A. They called me and said that we were purchasing the property and that they were putting it as a joint tenancy so it was in both of our names. Q. And did they say why they were doing that? A. So that it would be—there would be no complications or anything. That it would be my house, and I would have access to it.

And the testimony of Tatiana and her brother, Randall Jr., did not confirm the

understanding that the children would own the land only after the parents’ deaths.5

Considering the record made, we find the Andersons failed to prove by clear,

satisfactory, and convincing proof a mutual mistake in the terms of the written

deed.

Still, the district court found that the mistake did not have to be mutual and

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Related

Westcott v. Westcott
259 N.W.2d 545 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1977)
Coyle v. Kujaczynski
759 N.W.2d 637 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2008)
In Re the Estate of Johnson
739 N.W.2d 493 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2007)

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Zach Thielen and Tatiana Y. Thielen v. Randall E. Anderson and Rebecca S. Anderson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zach-thielen-and-tatiana-y-thielen-v-randall-e-anderson-and-rebecca-s-iowactapp-2023.