187 Iowa 1090 | Iowa | 1919
“Amounting .in all to 40 acres, more or less, to have and to hold the aforesaid bargained and granted premises unto him the said John W. Joslin and his heirs and assigns forever, and the same is upon the express condition, that said John W. Joslin shall in no way sell, convey or dispose of said premises aforesaid while he shall live, but that the same shall, after his death, descend to his heirs only, for their own purpose, use and benefit forever.”
“This conveyance made subject to the life estate of my father and mother, John W. and Sarah Jane Joslin.”
This was nine years before John W. died, and the evidence shows that, at the time this deed was executed, the plaintiff and her husband, defendant Lovina Beam, and her
The deed from John G. to his sister, the defendant, shows that he and the defendant both so construed it, and defendant Lovina purchased her brother’s interest, subject to the life estate of both her father and mother. A clause in one of the mortgages before referred to tends to so show. The defendant Lovina Beam testifies:
“Q. You knew your mother was receiving the rents for this 20 acres? A. Yes. Q. You permitted her to do it? A. She had a right to it, as it was her place. Q. You knew she had certain rights to this 20 acres, by reason of a deed from your father, or from your grandfather to your father?
The defendant A. J. Beam testifies that plaintiff, told him, in 1887, before he“r husband’s death, that she had a life estate in this 20 acres. Plaintiff testifies that her daughter, Mrs. Beam, at one time wanted to know i.f she, plaintiff, Avould sell the 20 acres, and put the money in a big farm, and that plaintiff said, “No, I will never sell my home.” This conversation is denied by Mrs. Beam. Plaintiff further testifies:
“My husband’s father gave my husband 40 acres of land for his share of his estate; Lovina got 10 acres of it, and John got 10 acres. Q. Did you know you had a right to these premises for your life, in a deed from your son to your daughter? You knew that? A. Why, yes. Q. You knew of a deed being made out. between your son John and your daughter Lovina? A. Yes. Q. State whether or not you knew of any provisions made for your staying on these premises during your lifetime, in a deed from your son to your daughter. A. I always thought, and carried that idea, that the 20 was my home until I got through with it.”
Plaintiff testifies she did not know the provisions in
“Q. Did you understand you owned a third of this 20? A. Yes, I always thought I did. Q. Did you ever hear Lovina make any claim that you did not own one third of it? .A. No. Q. Did she ever make any claim to you that you did not? A. No. Q. Do you claim one third of this 20? A. I do, and always have.”
The defendants testify that the first they heard of plaintiff’s claiming a third was when the original notice was served. In speaking of the life lease executed by her to defendant A. J. Beam, in 1911, plaintiff says:
“The contract, or lease, was not made the way I wanted it at all. It was not done the way I said it should be done. When it was written up, I spoke to them, and said that $60 will keep me, as long as I am able to work. Mr. Beam spoke up and said, T will take care of you, the time I am on your place. I will take care of you.’ That ought to have been put in the writing, and I thought it was. I never found out that it was not in until last winter, when my granddaughter wanted to look at it, and told me. This is the first I knew that it was not in the lease. This was shortly before this suit was commenced. I wanted it that he was to pay the taxes and keep up the fences. I have no property except what I receive from this 20.”
No reformation of the contract is aisked, however. Plaintiff also testified:
“I had pneumonia lately. I sent for my daughter to come and see me, but she did not come. I have only $10 left. I haven’t any place to stay. When I came from New York, last May, Mrs. Houlette wrote to her father in New York that her Aunt Lovina would keep me through the day, but would not keep me over night; that I would have to go to the poor house. I didn’t go there, because I didn’t want to be turned out of the house.” ^
Appellant contends that appellees also recognized that plaintiff was claiming such a life estate by taking a lease in 1911, after plaintiff had abandoned the property in 1908 and went to New York; and the further circumstance is relied upon, as showing that plaintiff claimed her rights under the law and the deeds, that she leased the land for life, in 1911, and received rent after she ceased living on the land. The argument, in brief, at this point, is that the fact that plaintiff has not occupied the land since 1908, and leased it for life in 1911, is a circumstance showing that-she was claiming a life estate without occupancy, which could only be under her ownership of one third, and the life estate reserved or excepted for her benefit in the half interest in the deed from her son to her daughter; that the circumstances are inconsistent with an election to occupy as a homestead, and that they show no election; that, had
It is further argued by appellant that plaintiff had a right, under the deed from her son to the daughter, to occupy one half of the premises for life, and that this right was recognized and never questioned by defendant until this suit. They contend further that, as a tenant in common, she had a right to occupy the premises just as she did, and that she had an absolute right to an undivided one third, and that, if her occupancy could fairly be based on some right other than the right to occupy the homestead for life, in lieu of her one third, then there is no inference of an election to claim a homestead. The cases in support of these propositions will be cited later in the opinion. Appellees concede in argument that, under the case of Wold & Olson v. Buckholtz, 105 Iowa 375, cited by appellant, tenants in common have equal rights as to possession, and that the possession of one may be the possession of all; but they say that the trouble with appellant’s position in this respect is that plaintiff’s claim was absolute, because the defendant Mrs. Beam testified, at one time in her examination, that plaintiff told her that she had no right there. It is true that defendant did so testify; but, taking the evidence of Mrs. Beam all together, and all the evidence, it is quite clear that plaintiff did recognize that Mrs. Beam had an interest in the property as an heir, and under the deed from her brother, subject to what they all supposed was a life estate in plaintiff under the first deed. It is claimed by appellees, and conceded by appellant, that' the
It is true that, ordinarily, an election to take the homestead right is evidenced by the continued occupancy of the premises as a homestead by a surviving spouse and family, but this is not conclusive. We said, in Gray v. Wright, 142 Iowa 225, 227:
“It is true that continued possession of the homestead .by the widow is evidence tending to show an election to take homestead rights, instead of a statutory share; but it is not conclusive, and, if the testimony as a whole makes it reasonably clear that, while remaining in possession, she is always asserting an interest in the title, as distinguished from the mere right of life occupancy and use, the presumption or inference derived from the fact of continued possession is overcome. This is especially true where, as in this case, the homestead is all the property left by the deceased husband, and the heirs at no time demanded a partition or an accounting for rents and profits.”
Appellees rely most upon Huit v. Huit, supra, but an examination of that case shows that there was little, if anything, in the case except the occupancy, and the widow did not claim any other right than to occupy as a homestead. Such was the situation in some of the other cases before cited. The primary right of a surviving spouse is
Without further discussion, we think, as we have already said, that plaintiff’s possession may fairly be referable to the first deed, or both' of them, and that it is not shown that she intended to, or that she did, by such occupancy, elect to take homestead, in lieu of her distributive share. The following cases sustain our conclusion: Hemping v. Hemping, 141 Iowa 535, 536, 538; Robson v. Lambertson, 115 Iowa 366, 369; Bosworth v. Blaine, supra. It follows, then, that the decree of the district court must be, and it is, — Reversed.