126 Iowa 391 | Iowa | 1905
The petitioner states that her father, Silas Hoon, died, leaving a will, by which his property and estate were to be divided equally between herself and her brother, the defendant. She further states that at the time of his death the said testator had no property or estate except a certain lot in Tipton of the value of $1,000. This property, she says, was purchased with the proceeds of other property formerly owned by her father, and that in taking the conveyance thereof the deed was made to the defendant, Rush Hoon. It is further averred that the deed, though absolute in form, was in fact held by defendant in trust for the benefit of her said father, and was so recognized in his lifetime. By a separate paragraph of the petition it is further alleged that the “ deed is a fraud, and was procured fraudulently, without the knowledge of Silas Hoon, who supposed up to the time of his death that the record title was. in himself.”
The ruling of the trial court is sustainable on several grounds.
This presumption is not conclusive, Cotton v. Wood, 25 Iowa, 43, and may be overcome by clear and satisfactory proof; but to permit the introduction of such proof the party asserting the trust must plead something more than the fact that the parent’s money paid for the land while the deed was made to the child. In other words, he must allege the facts on which he relies to overcome the presumption to which the matters just stated give rise.
The question of the effect of the statute of limitations •is also discussed by counsel, but the conclusion we have reached upon other questions raised by the appeal makes it unnecessary for us to consider it.
The demurrer was correctly sustained, and the judgment 'appealed from is affirmed.