205 N.W. 339 | Iowa | 1925
I. The plaintiff and defendant F. Marion Pray were married in 1907, and divorced on the 4th of November, 1911. As a result of this marriage, one child was born. Prior to the divorce proceedings, but in anticipation thereof, the plaintiff and her husband had a conference as to alimony and the division of the property. The result of this conference was a written stipulation providing that the defendant was to pay plaintiff $85 per month for the support of the child until such child reached the age of 18 years, and was to pay the wife $5,000 on March 1, 1920. Upon the entry of the decree, the husband made to the wife a note for $5,000, due March 1, 1920. The decree provided nothing as to the note, but simply recited that there was to be $85 a month paid for the support of the child. When the note matured, the ex-husband was unable to pay the same, and a renewal note was made therefor, which was signed by F. Marion Pray and L.A. Pray, his brother. This note was not paid in September, 1921, and suit was brought thereon by the plaintiff against the signers. This case was compromised or settled by the payment of $500 and interest, the same being paid by L.A. Pray, and by a renewal of the remainder in three notes: one for $500 and two others for $1,000 and $3,000 respectively. The plaintiff insisted on security, and these notes were also signed by L.A. Pray and Hattie C. Pray. The $500 and $1,000 notes were paid by L.A. Pray, but the $3,000 note was not paid, and the present action was brought thereon. *697
It is to be noted that, in the making of the last three notes above specified, aside from the extension of time, the interest therein provided was increased from 6 to 7 per cent.
In answer to plaintiff's petition herein, F. Marion Pray filed a separate answer, in which he pleads, in substance, that the original notes were given without consideration, and that the settlement which gave rise to that note was made under a mistake of fact, in that he and his wife thought, at that time, that his financial worth was somewhere between $20,000 and $40,000; but that in truth and in fact he has since discovered that he was insolvent at the very time of the making of said settlement.
L.A. and Hattie C. Pray filed separate answers, in which, in a general way, they denied indebtedness, and alleged want of consideration, and further alleged that L.A. Pray made the second note, of which this was a renewal, under a mistake as to his financial situation; and they make the answer of F. Marion Pray a part of their answer. Under these issues the jury was waived, and the case was tried to the court, which found judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant F. Marion Pray for the amount due on the note, but dismissed plaintiff's petition against L.A. and Hattie C. Pray.
We labor under some disadvantage in passing on this case, due to the fact that we have not been favored with any brief and argument on the part of the appellees, and the case is argued on behalf of the appellant by an attorney who took no part in the trial. There is no finding by the trial judge, and the judgment entry gives very little light on the grounds that moved the judge to enter the judgment he did. The judgment entry does find that, as against F. Marion Pray, there was a consideration for the note. As to the grounds on which the plaintiff's petition against L.A. and Hattie C. Pray was dismissed, we are left to speculate. It is apparent from the pleadings that, at most, there could be but two questions considered thereunder: first, want of consideration; and second, the claim of mutual mistake between plaintiff and her then husband as to his financial condition at the time their settlement was made. We will give attention to the latter proposition first.
F. Marion Pray, in testifying in the case, says that, at the time this settlement was made, he had an interest in the Hughes, *698 Dorman, and Bracewell farms, and an interest in a partnership engaged in handling and raising fancy stock, aside from his household furniture and automobile. He said that at that time he was of the opinion that his interest in the Bracewell farm alone was worth between $15,000 and $20,000. It is fairly deducible from the record that he was engaged in speculation by way of buying and selling farms. The evidence shows that he, like many others, was overtaken by the deflation and depression that shortly followed the time of making of this settlement with his wife, and that he was unable to realize from his transactions; and at the time of this trial he was probably bankrupt.
In 1922, he made application to the district court to modify the judgment and reduce the alimony allowed therein, on the ground that he had then practically become insolvent; and the court reduced the alimony allowance in favor of the child from $85 to $15 per month.
The sum total of this claimed defense is that, at the time the settlement was made with the plaintiff, defendant believed that he was worth somewhere between $20,000 and $40,000, and that he subsequently discovered that, as a matter of 1. BILLS AND fact, he was insolvent at the time the NOTES: settlement was made. If this is a permissible validity: defense, — a question which we do not pass mutual upon, — the evidence in the case given by the mistake as defendant F. Marion Pray and his witnesses does to maker's not in any way tend to support it. Taking his financial own language, he owned equities in these various worth. farms, which seem to have disappeared by reason of a deflation of the boom. This is the most that can be said for his testimony, and it in no way tends to show that his original estimate of his worth was not approximately correct at the time of the settlement with his wife. We therefore hold against the appellees on this contention, they having pleaded this as a part of their defense against this note.
II. We have ever recognized the right of a husband and wife, in anticipation of separation, to make contracts for the division of their property, and these contracts have always been *699 2. HUSBAND AND enforced by the courts. See Martin v. Martin, 65 WIFE: Iowa 255, and cases therein cited. It must contracts: follow, therefore, that the note given by F. division of Marion Pray to his wife, in the first instance, property was a valid and binding note, and therefore had pending a valid consideration. As heretofore stated, it divorce. was renewed, and the second note was signed by L.A. Pray as surety. When that note matured, and was not paid, suit was brought thereon; the matter was adjusted, as hereinbefore explained; and the note in suit 3. BILLS AND herein was then made, signed by F. Marion Pray NOTES: and L.A. Pray and Hattie C. Pray. Hattie C. Pray conside- signed the same because the plaintiff herein ration: insisted on security, and the lawsuit was thus sureties. settled and dismissed. Under this situation, how can it be said, as to L.A. and Hattie C. Pray, that there was no consideration for the note?
It is pleaded that L.A. and Hattie C. Pray were sureties on the note, — at least they were lending their names to F. Marion Pray, — and the fact that no consideration passed to them for such signature is not available to them as a defense. More than this, L.A. Pray was a signer of the previous note, of which this note was a renewal. This proposition seems to be settled in the Code of 1924, Section 9489, and in Klemm v. Weil,
FAVILLE, C.J., and EVANS and MORLING, JJ., concur.