188 Iowa 60 | Iowa | 1920
The answer admits the making of the note, but denies that, at the time of said transaction, the payee was under guardianship, or was of unsound mind. As an affirmative defense, defendant further alleges that said Scott is her uncle, and that, at the time the note was made, and for many years prior thereto, relations of intimate affection and regard existed between him and herself and husband; that, on said date, Scott was visiting defendant and her husband in their home in the town of Ellsworth, Iowa, and then and there urged and advised defendant and husband to build a new home at that place. As an inducement so to do, Scott offered or proposed to advance to defendant and husband the money represented by said note, which, by the mutual agreement of the parties, was made and intended to evidence the obligation of the defendant and husband to pay their said uncle interest on said sum so advanced at 5 per cent annually so long as said payee should live, such payment of interest for his life to be in full discharge of the obligation imposed upon defendants by the acceptance of said money. Said offer on part of Scott is alleged to have been accepted by defendant and husband, and it was upon such consideration and understanding that the note was given; and the said Scott, in pursuance of such' agreement and understanding, and to give effect thereto on his part, made and executed his last will and testament, by the terms of which he specifically bequeathed the note now in suit to the defendant.
Defendant further says that, relying on such agree-
Plaintiff first attacked the answer by motion to strike all the affirmative allegations therein, as being redundant and immaterial. The motion, being overruled, was followed by a demurrer, on the following grounds: (1) That the matters alleged are contrary to and are an attempt to vary by parol the written contract evidenced by the note; and (2) that the alleged agreement for the making of a will by Scott, giving the note to the defendant, is without consideration, and therefore voidable’; and the will, being without consideration, is revocable at the pleasure of the testator, and in no case is available to the defendant during the testator’s lifetime.
The demurrer was sustained, and, defendant electing to stand upon her answer without further pleading or amendment, judgment was entered against her for the amount appearing due on the note and costs. From this judgment, defendant appeals.
I. Is the answer obnoxious to the rule which excludes parol testimony to vary or contradict the terms of a written contract?
In the last-cited case, it is held that a note, may be delivered to the payee with a valid oral agreement as to conditions upon which it -is to become payable, the observance of which conditions is essential to their validity; that the annexing of such conditions to the delivery is not an oral contradiction of the written obligation; and that, as it needs a delivery to make an obligation operative, the effect of it and the extent to which it becomes operative may be limited by the condition attending its delivery. See, also, Ware v. Allen, 128 U. S. 590; Juilliard v. Chaffee, 92 N. Y. 530; Jilson v. Gilbert, 26 Wis. 637; Dicken v. Morgan, 54 Iowa 684; McFarland v. Sikes, 54 Conn. 250; Bragg v. Stanford, 82 Ind. 234; Kirkpatrick v. Taylor, 43 Ill. 207; Slade v. Halsted, 7 Cow. (N. Y.) 322.
But, for the rule governing the case before us, we need not go beyond the range of our own applicable precedents. In Oakland C. Assn. v. Lakins, 126 Iowa 121, we had an action to recover upon a promissory note. There, as in this case, a demurrer to the answer was sustained by the trial court. The plea demurred to was, in substance, that the payee, one Boyd, conveyed to defendant certain town lots, and, in consideration thereof, defendant undertook to pay Boyd interest at 6 per cent on the sum of $700, during
In each case, also, the question of law is raised whether the facts so pleaded state a defense to an action on the note. We there held, in effect,, that the plea not only goes to the question of the consideration of the note sued upon, but was also within the rule permitting proof of conditional ‘delivery, as well as the rule which permits parol evidence of the discharge of a written agreement “although the transaction involves proof of a collateral parol agreement.” The ruling of the trial court sustaining the demurrer was, therefore, reversed.
Quite in point, too, is Marsh v. Chown, 104 Iowa 556, where, in an action upon promissory notes given by a daughter to her father, it was held competent to plead and prove that they were executed and delivered, not as evidencing a debt, but as being in the nature of receipts for gifts by way of advancements previously made from parent to cMld.
.Following the precedents already cited, we held that proof of the transaction, as pleaded in the answer, could properly be established by parol testimony. Answering the objections made at this point to introduction of parol testimony, we said:
“We are not inclined to this view. These instruments [the notes and mortgage] were complete in themselves. The alleged oral undertaking neither added thereto nor detracted therefrom. It did not purport to vary either. It served merely as an inducement to the entering into the written contracts on the terms stated therein. The law is well established that there may be one contract provid
The same rule has recognition in Waukee Sav. Bank v. Jones, 179 Iowa 261, 266; McCormick Harv. Co. v. Morlan, 121 Iowa 451. And even though it be conceded, as it must be, that there is difficulty in reconciling all the decided cases found in the books along these lines, we think the statute already cited, Section 3060-a16, Code Supplement, 1913, is quite controlling. It provides, in express words, that “every contract on a negotiable instrument is incomplete and revocable until delivery of the instrument for the purpose of giving effect theretoj’ and that, as between the parties, the delivery “may be shown to have been conditional or for a special purpose only.” If, without this provision, the rule against parol evidence would operate to exclude proof that a note was delivered to be held simply as evidence of or security for the maker’s obligation to pay interest on that sum during the payee’s life, and “not for the purpose of giving effect thereto” as a promissory note, then the rule of evidence must, to that extent, give way to the statute.
No written contract is complete without delivery, and delivery consists, not in a mere manual act of passing the paper into the hand of another: the essence of delivery is in the intent of the parties, and it is competent for them to attach thereto any conditions upon which they may agree. Proof of such conditions of delivery does not add to or take from or vary the terms of the writing, but goes rather to the question whether the writing ever became a contract at all, or was delivered for some agreed special purpose, other than the transfer of property in the instrument. If, therefore, we are not to unduly narrow the scope of the statute, and abandon the rule affirmed by us in our prior cases (Oakland C. Assn. v. Lakins, Marsh v. Chown, Ball v. James, and others hereinbefore cited), we think it
II. Is the answer demurrable as pleading an agreement between the defendant and Scott which is not supported by a consideration?
But the plea against which this objection is raised is not an attempt to get the benefit of a will in the lifetime of the testator, for a will can operate as such only from the testator’s death. The making of a will may, however, be .the subject of a valid contract, and the fact of such agreement may readily become an item of competent testimony
If the answer were to be treated or construed as pleading a. mere gift inter vivos, or a promise or contract to make a gift in the future, the objection made thereto by the appellee would present a much more serious question; but such is not the nature or effect of the alleged transaction. The advancement or payment of a sum of money, in consideration of which the party receiving it obligates himself to pay the party advancing it a stated annuity or rate of interest for life, does not amount to a gift, in any sense of the word.
There is a valuable consideration furnished by the one party, for which the other assumes a valid and enforcible obligation to pay a specified yearly sum, terminable only by the death of the other party. The promise or agreement, if one was made, to leave the note by will to the defendant would, in such case, be no more than a provision by which the instrument securing the payment of the annuity or interest charge should be surrendered to defendant when the obligation of the contract should be terminated by the death of the annuitant.
We conclude, therefore, that the answer is not vulnerable to the objection that it pleads an alleged agreement which, upon its face, is void for want of consideration.
It follows, of necessity, that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer, and in rendering judgment for the plaintiff on the pleadings.
The judgment is, therefore, — Reversed-.