171 Iowa 225 | Iowa | 1915
¥e think it sufficient reply that the court appointed an administrator who is by the record shown to be a man of good standing and disinterested; that the presumption múst be indulged he will act faithfully within the limits set by the
II. Meikle v. Hobson, 167 Iowa 666, decided in this court December 15, 1911, is called to our attention. We there decide that, since a party may be a witness in court, if such party fails to appear to an action in his own right, the other may, at his election, have a continuance at the cost of the delinquent, and an action may be dismissed if plaintiff fails to appear when the case is called for trial; that, in a suit brought by husband and wife against a third person, neither is in contempt for refusing to testify on a deposition sued out by the defendant. This is put on the ground, among others, •that to permit it “would lend the full power of the court to a process for the discovery not only of the claims of the opposite party, but also the details of the evidence, so far as known to the plaintiff, upon which the ease would depend, not regulated by the control which a court will give as to excluding testimony which is not competent or is forbidden.” The only argument with which we are favored as to the applicability of this is the statement that ‘£ the very purpose in Judge Wade’s mind in the cited ease, as shown by this opinion of the court, is the same illegal scheme as in the case at bar, as he admits in his evidence as a witness in- this case
The essence of our holding in Meilde’s Case is that, since parties to a suit may be adequately dealt with in open court for failure or refusal to give proper testimony, the general deposition statute should not be resorted to in order to obtain their testimony, because the only possible use of such proceeding would be to obtain testimony, which the court itself would not admit. In its general aspect, it declares the self-evident postulate that the machinery of the law shall not be resorted to colorably; oppressively, nor to obtain what the law does not grant. The mere claim that the application at bar was made for some such purpose is not enough to invoke the application of this rule here, even though there be evidence to sustain the accusation. The statute provides (Code, Sec. 3299) that under given conditions a special administrator “may” be appointed. Whether the appointment was sought for improper purposes was one of the things to be presented to and considered by the court applied to. The language of the statute gives that court power to grant or deny. Had the court found that the application was for purposes such as appellants assert, it would have been its duty to use its discretion to deny the application. It follows that the granting of it involves finding as a fact that the application was a rightful one. If there be evidence upon which we would have sustained the court had the finding been to the contrary, the finding it did make is yet so sufficiently sustained by the evidence as that we may not interfere.
III. The Code, See. 3299, provides that:
2. Executors AND ADMINISTRATORS : special administrator : appointment : probate of will suspended by contest: effect. “When, from any cause, general administration or probate of a will cannot be immediately granted, one or more special administrators may. be appointed to collect and preserve the property of the deceased, and no appeal from such appointment shall prevent their proceeding in the discharge of their duties.”
On one showing by the sons, they had no means on the day the deeds were drawn, other than that William owned some undeseribed and unvalued Texas land. But their witness, the scrivener White, claims that the father spoke of several pieces of land then deeded as lands for which the boys had paid him; that it should, therefore, be in their name, and fixed while he was living, so there would be no trouble afterwards. This witness adds that, as to the balance of the land, he guesses it was a cash sale for the amount stated in the deeds as consideration. He says nothing was said as to where the boys were to get the money to pay spot cash, nor as to giving notes, and the witness adds that they had that arrangement among themselves. William, however, clears all this up by saying that nothing was paid for the land, and that he spent all the money he ever got from his father. White says the testator spoke right up and said something about he wanted to make it right, — “fix it up right and equal.” Thereupon, to carry out this desire to make things equal, he gave Mary, the daughter who stayed at home, three cows for extra services, and each of his three daughters $1,000, and all the lands to the three boys. He also desired that William be made executor. The will was finished hurriedly, “because it was getting late.” William got the deeds and did not record them during the five years that the father lived.
We do not overlook the fact that the scrivener says that, in his opinion, testator was sane; that no coercion was used in his presence, and that all the father’s acts were spontaneous ; neither do we overlook the fact that this witness makes it plain that he has had little opportunity for judging of the capacity of the father, and that it is not likely acts of coercion were employed in his presence. Williaip offers bonds freely, because he knows all about the property; yet, though he has been running the place for twenty years, he says he
In connection with offering bond in any sum which the court may in reason order, to assure appellees of their rights as same may ultimately be determined, appellants say they make such offer the more readily because they know the nature, extent and location of all the property the father had at his death. As seen, and asi will appear later, they also claim that the father left no property at his death, and that he owned no personal property for ten years before his death. Though, despite their claim there is no property, they are, upon confession, able to point out definitely what personal estate there is, it must be admitted they have not done so in this record, and that some peculiarities are developed as to the personal property, if any there be, and other peculiarities, if there be no estate.
The will was drawn after deeds to all the lands owned by the father had been made. According to appellants, there was no property other than certain lands, except some deposits, relatively unimportant in size, upon which drafts drawn in the name of one son were being honored while the father still lived. There is no explanation why, in such circumstances, a will was drawn at all', and why the testator should say that he was disposing of “real and personal both,” as the scrivener says he did, except the claim that the sons knew nothing of the making of a will, which, if true, of course, relieves them from explaining why it was made. This claim, however, is, to put it mildly, also somewhat peculiar. Here is an assertion that the two sons never heard a will mentioned, and knew
Be that as it may, it is striking that when William says that, at the time of the execution of the deeds, the father said the property was to go “to us boys, all that he had was to go to us,” not a suspicion arose as to whether there was a will, and no inquiry was made as to what was “all that he had.” Again, while the father said nothing about a will, yet he told them they were to pay $3,000 in legacies; and William insists that, while this was said on several occasions before the will and deeds were made, and shortly after the scrivener ieft who drew them, nothing was said about a will, and that the agreement to pay what the will gives as legacies
The judgment below should be, and it is — Affirmed.