81 Iowa 84 | Iowa | 1890
I. A question is made by counsel for appellee as to the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action. It is urged that he should have set up his claim to the land in an answer to the action of forcible detainer, and that the justice of the peace, before whom the proceeding was pending, would have certified the case to the district court as involving the title to real estate, and that all of the rights of the parties could have been determined in that action. The conclusion we have reached upon the merits of the case renders it unnecessary to determine that question, and it is for the interest of the parties that the controversy between them be determined without further litigation.
II. The farm has been owned by the defendant for many years, and we infer from the evidence that it is quite valuable. He had three sons and one daughter. Before the arrangement was made which plaintiff claims was a purchase of part of the farm by him of his
■ “Dear Children [ Conrad and Mary Lioh ] : — We received your welcome letter the eighth of June, and have seen out of it that you are well. You write in your letter that you don’t know whether you will get anything if you come back or not. Now, I will tell you boys what I am willing to do with you all. I am willing to defray some'of your ■ expenses for your coming back, and then I will divide my land in equal pieces, and then you may draw cuts, each of you, and then I don’t ask no more than the fourth part of what you raise, with the exception of about five or six acres, which I reserve for me. You boys can have it all. I can’t work much more, and your mother neither. You write me in your letter you are doing pretty well there, and I wouldn’t force you to come back if you think that you are doing better there than you could here. We like very much to have you here, and every one of you is welcome. You come, and your wife, and your brother William, and believe us that your wife will be as well respected as any of our other children. If you shouldn’t want to come back, let me know it at once, and say yes or no, so I know what I have to do. We had a very cold and wet spring. It delayed us very much, so that I only could plant twenty acres of corn in May month. The rest I had to plant in June. I have a hired hand, and have to pay him twenty-six dollars a month.
“ [ Signed in Herman] Cohead Lich.”
The plaintiff and his brother William returned from California in the fall of 1868, and remained during the
It is claimed that by a proper construction of the above letter, and the acts of the parties, the plaintiff became the equitable owner of the land which he now claims. On the other hand, it is claimed by the defendant that the occupancy of the land by plaintiff has been that of a mere tenant. It is true, as claimed by the plaintiff, that a certain part of the farm was marked off and designated as for him, but the evidence is far from convincing the mind that the defendant intended that the occupancy by plaintiff should be that of an owner. In the light of all the evidence, the offer in the letter to divide the land in equal parts, and to draw cuts, and that the boys were to have it all, is as consistent with the claim of the defendant that he intended to give his sons permanent homes on the land as tenants at a low rent, as that he intended to make a final disposition of his farm. It is claimed by plaintiff that he put valuable improvements on the land in the belief that he was the owner, and that defendant knew this, and ought not now be allowed to take advantage of the labor and outlay of the plaintiff for nearly his whole life. There is much conflict in the evidence as to the value and nature of the improvements. There is good reason for holding that a greater part of the money paid out for improvements was paid by the defendant. There is one most important circumstance which to our minds is inconsistent with the claim made by the plaintiff. It is this: In the year 1881, he made a sale and sold out everything he had in the way of personal property, including some sheds he had put upon the land, sold his stock and farming implements, and his household and kitchen furniture, and removed to California, and remained a year or two, and entered one hundred and sixty acres of land, and proved it up, as a homestead. While he was gone the defendant rented the land to others. If is
The decree of the district court will be affirmed.