63 Iowa 55 | Iowa | 1884
At the next term of this court; after' this order was made in the district court, appellants filed an amended and supplemental abstract containing these proceedings; also, the judgment or decree of the district court, in which is incorporated what purports to be said ante-nuptial contract in full. Appellee now contends that we cannot consider this supplemental abstract-; that appellant, having averred that the original abstract was correct, and having filed the certificate of the judge who tried the case, and of the short-hand reporter, to its correctness, cannot now be heard to assert the contrary. The original abstract shows that the evidence introduced on the trial was taken down by the official. short-hand reporter of the court, and that his minutes or notes were at once filed with the clerk:” '
The statute, section 3777, McClain’s Code, makes these notes, when thus filed with the clerk, part of the record of the case, and we know of no reason why this record may not be amended or corrected by the court that made it, when it is ascertained in a proper proceeding that it does not fully or correctly embody the action or proceeding of which it was intended to be the record. It has been’ frequently held, it is true, that it is not competent to contradict the recitals in the bill of exceptions by affidavit, or by the certificate of the judge, as in Pearson v. Maxfield, 47 Iowa, 135, cited by appellee, and in Dedrio v. Hopson, 62 Id., 562. But the difference between the holding in those cases and the question
In this case, howerer, we are not satisfied by the evidence that appellee was ignorant of her rights when she signed the contract, or that any advantage was taken of her. The evidence shows that William Mahafly was about sixty-nine years old when this contract was entered into; that he was an ordinarily well-to-do farmer, living on his farm, but having it cultivated either by hired help or by tenants; and that, for a number of years, he had been unable to do much work, being in delicate health and suffering from some disease of the heart. Appellee at this time was about thirty-three years old, and had been living for some time'in Mahaffy’s family as a domestic. She was almost illiterate; was poor and depended on her own earnings for support, having neither home nor
We are well satisfied that the marriage was one of convenience rather than affection. Appellee, doubtless, entertained a feeling of respect for the man she married, but we are convinced that she was induced to enter into the relation by a consideration of the pecuniary advantages which she would gain by the marriage, rather than by any of the tender emotions that ordinarily influence women to enter into that
“These parties, in view of an intended marriage, and previous to the consummation of that relation, and to settle the rights of each in regard to the property of the other, do now make and enter into this contract and agreement:
“ In consideration of the agreements and stijnilations hereinafter set forth on the part of the party of the second part, I, Wm. Mahaffy, party of the first part, do hereby agree and bind myself, my heirs and administrators, that, after my death, there shall be paid to the said Elizabeth Hutchinson, as my ■widow, the sum of six hundred dollars, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent from the date of my decease until*63 paid, and I hereby charge the payment of the same upon any and all of my said estate that I may leave, both personal and real, the same to be her dower and portion in full of my said estate, and in lieu and stead of any dower or rights of inheritance therein, given or created by operation of law.
“ And I, Elizabeth Hutchinson, party of the second part, and in contemplation of the marriage aforesaid, with its rights and responsibilities, and in consideration of the payment of the said sum of six hundred dollars, and six per cent interest thereon from the decease of the party of the first part until paid, hereby agree and bind myself to receive and accept the said sum in full' payment, and in entire and complete satisfaction of all my rights of dower and inheritance as the widow and heir of the party of the first part in his said estate, both real and personal, and I hereby now renounce and relinquish all claim, right, title and interest therein by reason of the said relation of wife or widow of the said Mahaffy.”
The covenant of Mahaffy, as expressed in the language immediately following the preamble, is, “that, after my death, there shall be paid out of my estate, to said Elizabeth Hutchinson, as my widow, the sum of six hundred dollars, * * * the same to be her dower and portion in full of my said estate, and in lieu and stead of any dower or rights of inheritance therein, given and created by operation of law.” And this is followed by an agreement on the part of said Elizabeth Hutchinson “to receive and accept the said sum in full payment, and in entire and complete satisfaction, of all my rights of dower and inheritance as the widow and heir of the party of the first part in his said estate.” These provisions of the contract relate, beyond doubt, to the distributive share which she would have taken under the statutes of the state in his estate, and by them she is bound to accept said sum of money ■in satisfaction of her right of inheritance in the estate. Rut this, we think, is the extent of these provisions.
■ The right of the wife to continue in possession and occupancy of the homestead, after the death of the husband, is
We think, then, that defendant did not relinquish her right to occupy and possess the homestead by the provisions of the contract last quoted. But her agreement to accept the six hundred dollars in satisfaction of her right of dower and inheritance is followed immediately by the following language: “and I hereby now renounce and relinquish all claim, right, title and interest therein by reason of the said relation of wife or -widow of the said Mahaffy.” And appellants contend that, by this provision of the contract, defendant relinquished her right to continue to occupy the homestead — the claim being that this clause has the effect to enlarge the contract as expressed by the preceding covenants, and"that, by these general terms, the parties intended to include and divest every right, title and interest which defendant would have taken, by virtue of the marriage, in the estate of Mahaffy.
We had occasion, in another ease between these parties, to construe this provision of the contract. 61 Iowa, 679. In that case we held that this clause did not have the effect to enlarge the contract, but that the general terms therein -were used with reference to the rights and interests mentioned in the preceding clause, and that this clause was added to complete and render more certainly effective those which preceded it. Appellant’s counsel, in their argument in this case, have attacked this construction with a good deal of vigor. They claim that the word “therein,” as used in this clause, relates to the terms “his said estate” in the preceding clause, and that, to apply it to the interest and right in said estate,
Defendant answered the amendment to the petition, admitting the death of said Margaret, and claiming that she was heir •to one sixth of the interest of said Margaret in the real estate of which William Mahaffy died seized, and praying that she be awarded the interest by the final judgment in the cáse. The judgment of the district court contains no special reference to this claim, but it in general terms quiets plaintiff’s title to said real estate against any and all claims and demands of defendant, except as to her right of homestead. We think ■that defendant’s answer to the amendment to the petition, in so far as it demands any relief as to'the estate of Margaret •Hawthorn, is in the nature of a cross petition in equity, apd, as the judgment of the district court is an adjudication of her claim in that respect, it is a judgment against her, and can be reviewed in this court only on an appeal by her, and, as she has not appealed, we will not enter into the question whether she took any interest in the estate of said Margaret Hawthorn. The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.