142 Iowa 125 | Iowa | 1909
The alleged right of plaintiff in the property in controversy arose out of a conveyance by defendant to plaintiff of a half interest in all the property of the defendant which was executed after plaintiff and defendant became husband and wife. Bor defendant the principal contentions are that the conveyance was not absolute, but conditional, and that 'the conditions thereof were broken by the plaintiff; that, with'the intention to surrender to defendant all interest in the property, the deed from defendant to plaintiff was by plaintiff surrendered to defendant, and by her destroyed; and that, in a settlement made between the parties as to their property rights incident to the granting of a divorce to the defendant from the plaintiff, the deed already referred to as having been
In 1893 plaintiff became pastor of a church at Macedonia, in this State, in which defendant was a member. At that time plaintiff was about thirty-seven years of age, and defendant, a widow, possessing about $30,000 in property, consisting principally of farms, was of the age of fifty-one years. Defendant had one daughter of the age of fourteen residing with her, and had other children who were married. Soon after becoming located in Macedonia, the plaintiff became a boarder in the home of the defendant, and about six months afterwards commenced to have illicit relations with her. He continued to -live in her home until in the spring of 1897, when at defendant’s solicitation and with reluctance on the part of plaintiff they were married. One of the reasons assigned by plaintiff for the reluctance which he expressed to defendant in regard to the marriage was that plaintiff had also had illicit relations with defendant’s daughter above referred to after his illicit relations with defendant had commenced.
In 1903 defendant had become dissatisfied with her relations to plaintiff, and applied to the attorney in Council Bluffs who had drawn the deed and contract to institute an action for divorce, and, according to her testimony, the petition contained a prayer for the setting aside of the deed and contract. When defendant returned home, she advised plaintiff of the institution of this action, and plaintiff brought the deed and contract to her and delivered them into her hands, saying, as testified by defendant and her daughter who was present, that he relinquished all claims thereunder. A. few days afterward defendant destroyed the deed and contract which had thus been delivered to her; but the action for divorce was abandoned before notice was served, and the parties continued to live together under some apparent efforts at reconciliation. A few weeks later, apparently in pursuance of this arrangement for reconciliation, the defendant executed to her daughter a deed for a forty-acre tract of land included within the description of the previous deed to ■plaintiff, and plaintiff joined therein as husband of defendant, and not as part owner, and in the same transaction the defendant made a deed to plaintiff for the town property in Macedonia on which they resided, valued at from $1,200 to $1,500 in which the daughter joined for the purpose of extinguishing some interest therein as heir to her father, from whom defendant derived title. In the fall of 190-4 leases for the’ farm lands were made in the name of defendant alone, and not in the name of defendant and plaintiff as joint owners, and sometime during ■this year the partnership account at the bank was discontinued. The relations between the parties continued to be strained, and in December, 1904, defendant, as plaintiff testifies, threatened to turn him out of the house, whereupon he insisted that he was the owne.r of the property on
The contention ‘of plaintiff that, notwithstanding the settlement, he is still the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the property described in the original deed from defendant to plaintiff, is founded on a construction of the agreement of settlement, which excludes from it the interest which plaintiff claims was vested in him by the deed, and he supports this, contention by.his own testimony to the effect that, when he delivered the deed and contract to the defendant, he did not intend and used no language indicating the intention to surrender his rights under those instruments, but yielded possession of them to defendant on her solicitation in order to avoid trouble with defendant’s married son, and with the assurance from, defendant that the transfer of possession of the instruments would not in any way affect plaintiff’s rights. Plaintiff testified that he had no knowledge of any prayer in the first petition for a divorce for the cancellation of these instruments, and that the act of the defendant in subsequently in the fall of 1904 taking leases in her own name was explained to him by her as not ¿n intentional disclaimer of his continuing interest in the property; and he further testified that, when the final contract of settlement was made, he attempted to call his attorney’s attention to the fact that he had other interest in the property than that which was to be covered by the contract and was told by such attorney that it made no difference, so