70 N.W.2d 539 | Iowa | 1955
This appeal comes to us upon a meager record. There appears only the appellee’s claim against the estate of Mary E. Kneebs, deceased, the appellant-administrator’s objections, and the court’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and ruling and judgment allowing that part of the claim based upon the payment by the claimant of the funeral expenses and a fee to the minister. Other items set up in a later filed amendment to the claim were disallowed because filed too late and so barred by the statute of limitations; but the claimant has not appealed from that part of the judgment and we give it no further consideration.
I. The printed record shows no evidence offered by either party. The trial court in its findings says: “The court was requested by the parties to determine the validity of said claims from matters disclosed in the probate files of said estate, and no evidence on the accuracy of said claims was presented to the court. As the record stands only a legal question is tendered to the court for determination.”
Much of the argument of the parties here, particularly of the appellant, is based upon the ruling of the court in this action to set aside the deed and the matters set out in its findings of fact. We do not consider these to be properly before us. The record as a preliminary to setting out the trial court’s findings in the case last referred to recites only: “On the 19th of August, 1954, the administrator filed as administrator’s Exhibit 1, in the' case of Nettie L. Kneebs by Beatrice Eik, her guardian, plaintiff, vs. June Chase and Parker M. Chase, defendants, the court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, as follows:”. Then comes the several pages of the court’s ruling and judgment.
Whether these findings, conclusions and decree would have been admissible in a hearing on appellee’s claim we need not determine. They were not offered in evidence, and so far as we can determine were not considered by the trial court. It is recited that the court was requested to determine the validity of the claim from the probate files, and “no evidence on the accuracy of said claims was presented to the court.” The record in an entirely different proceeding such as the action to set aside'the deed was no part of the probate files in the estate of Mary E. Kneebs. We are not told where the papers in the equity action were filed, and they could not be made a part of the proper probate files even though filed there. We conclude no part of the action to set aside the conveyance, if such action there was,* is before us.
The question of the burden of proof therefore becomes important. The objections to that part of the claims which was allowed and which is the only subject of this appeal raised nothing more than the contention that the pajunent of the funeral expenses and the honorarium to the minister was voluntary on the’ part of the claimant; that he was not liable therefor; that “he voluntarily paid said sum and is now estopped to collect the same from this estate.” The appellant’s statement of issues, errors assigned, and brief points and argument all revolve around this question. No claim is made that the amount paid by the appellee for the funeral expenses and the $10 paid to the minister were not reasonable charges, suitable to the deceased’s station in life; so that while these were matters upon which the burden of proof was upon the claimant (see In re Estate of Ewing, 234 Iowa 950, 954, 955, 956, 14 N.W.2d 633, 635, 636) under the familiar rule that we consider only the errors assigned and argued, we have no concern with questions of reasonableness or suitability. Rule 344(a) (4) (Third), Iowa Rules of Civil Procedure; Waterloo Savings Bank v. Waterloo, Cedar Falls & Northern Railroad, 244 Iowa 1364, 1376, 1377, 60 N.W.2d 572, 579, and cases cited.
It is also well settled that a trial of a claim in probate is by ordinary proceedings, and the court’s findings of fact have the effect of a special verdict. The matter is not triable de novo upon appeal, and the trial court’s findings must stand if supported by substantial evidence. Bossen v. Hostetter, 243 Iowa 1241, 1245, 55 N.W.2d 281, 283; Finkle v. Finkle, 239 Iowa 783, 786, 32 N.W.2d 807, 808.
Returning to the only question made by the pleadings and the record upon appeal, we conclude the burden was upon the administrator to establish that the payment of the two items
The significance of the foregoing discussion relates to the burden of proof and is particularly important because of the meagerness of the record we have before us. We have held that ordinarily the burden of pleading and proof rests upon the same litigant. “Generally speaking, the burden of pleading and proving an issue go together. The party who is required to plead an issue has the burden of proving that issue.” In re Estate of Ewing, supra, 234 Iowa 950, 955, 14 N.W.2d 633, 635.
III. It is apparent the burden of proving the special defense pleaded was upon the pleader, that is, the appellant-administrator. All the record shows is that the claimant-appellee paid to the Anderson Funeral Home the sum of $775 on November 8, 1951, for Miss Mary Kneebs, and that on the same date he paid Reverend Forrester $10. The only reason given by the administrator why the claim should not be paid is that it was voluntary; a pleading, in fact, in confession and avoidance. The burden being upon the pleader, it was incumbent upon it to show that the payment was in fact voluntary to the extent that the appellee was an interloper or intermeddler, was not required to pay the claim and was not liable for it.
It is not always that one who pays a debt for which he is not personally liable, or who makes himself so liable when he need not, is barred from recovery from the original debtor. This seems particularly true when the debt paid is a funeral bill. Various courts have commented upon the fact that deceased persons must be promptly buried, and it is not always possible to wait until all the niceties of liability can be adjusted. Thus, in Smolka v. Chandler & Son, Inc., 41 Del. (2 Terry) 255, 261, 20 A.2d 131, 133, 134, 134 A. L. R. 629, it is said: “The funeral of a deceased person is a work of necessity, as well as of charity and piety. It is the duty of an executor or administrator to bury the deceased in a manner suitable to his degree and the circumstances of the estate; and if this duty is performed by the personal representative, or indeed by mother not officiously but from necessity, the law implies a promise of reimbursement out of the assets of the estate for the reasonable expenses incurred and paid; * * (Italics supplied.)
To the same effect is this language in In re Estate of Hincheon, 159 Cal. 755, 763, 116 P. 47, 50, 51, 36 L. R. A., N.S., 303: “It is not questioned by the respondents that money paid for funeral expenses by one not acting officiously, if reasonable, considering the estate of the deceased and the circumstances surrounding the death and burial, will be repaid by the estate to the party paying
To much the same effect are In re Jack’s Estate, 275 Pa. 405, 119 A. 474, In re Kirschstein’s Estate, 213 Minn. 1, 4 N.W.2d 633, and In re Tangerman’s Estate, 226 App. Div. 162, 235 N.Y.S 213.
"We ourselves have said: “It does not mean that the husband or any other person who may have properly paid them [the funeral expenses] shall not be reimbursed by the estate. If such other person hart paid them, no one would doubt the duty of .the estate to reimburse him.”
The appellee and apparently the trial court relied much on this statement. It may be well to point out the qualifying word “properly” in the foregoing quote, which is from Truax v. Ellett, 234 Iowa 1217, 1225, 15 N.W.2d 361, 365. The reference to another person was, in fact, dictum, since only the right of the husband to reimbursement'was involved;’and the dictum must’be read, as it is stated, to mean that thq payment must be a proper one — that is, not voluntary within the definition of the word and the meaning-of the cases which hold such a payment may not be recovered.
But we have, in Truax v. Ellett, supra, recognized by persuasive dictum, that a third person who pays a funeral bill under proper circumstances may recover it from the estate. There may be a real necessity, there may be a relationship, perhaps not, of the blood but of friendship or business, there may be an absence of relatives able or willing to act, which justifies arrangements for a funeral service being made by someone who, under different circumstances, would be a mere officious intermeddler. Each case must turn upon the facts shown. Here, with the duty upon the administrator'to show that the appellee was such an intermeddler so’ that his' actions were in fact voluntary within the meaning of the pleaded defense, we are constrained to hold that the burden has not been carried.
IV. It is urged by the appellant that the claimant may not recover because he does not come into court with clean hands. There is nothing to support this contention except the supposed copy of the court’s findings of fact and decree in the action to