192 Iowa 1080 | Iowa | 1922
“This contract and agreement made and entered into in duplicate this 16th day of May, 1918, by and between Wesley
The existence of the foregoing paper was not made known to the plaintiffs until after the death of Slocum. About the time of the appointment of the guardian, Frank had expressed the desire or purpose to return to Nebraska. Assuming that Frank would thus relinquish the care of his father, the guardian, acting under leave of court, entered into a contract with another person to care for the invalid, at a charge of $2,000 per year. Learning thisj Frank decided to remain, and the contract with the third person being abandoned, he himself entered into a written contract with the guardian, in the following words:
“Article of Agreement.
“These articles of agreement entered into by and between T. S. Redmond as guardian of the person and property of Wesley Slocum, party of the first part, and Frank Slocum and. Slocum, parties of the second part, witnesseth: That the said party of the first part hereby hires and employs Frank Slocum and Effie Slocum, husband and wife, for a period of one year from and after June 1, 1918, for the purpose of the said Frank Slocum and Effie Slocum taking all proper care of the said Wesley Slocum, who is an invalid and confined to his bed, and in many respects absolutely helpless; that the said parties of the second part are to take all good and proper care of the said Wesley Slocum, to attend and wait upon him, and to nurse him at all times, both day and night and whenever necessary, and
Recognizing the contract, the guardian continued to pay and the defendants continued to accept and receive the compensation therein provided for during all the ensuing period until the death of the ward. On October 23, 1918, several months after the appointment of the guardian and the execution of the contract between Frank Slocum and the guardian, and after the contract between Frank and his father, deposited in escrow, the difficulty of so construing these contracts that both
"Supplemental Statement to Contract.
"Whereas on the 16th day of May, 1918, the parties hereto, Wesley Slocum and Frank Slocum, entered into a written contract for life support. And whereas the whole intent of the parties thereto might not have been clearly and fully expressed therein, and acts and relations of the parties, since the execution thereof might be misunderstood, therefore said parties make and execute this supplemental statement, in order to clear up any and all doubt that might arise in connection with said contract and the acts of parties thereafter. With reference to the middle paragraph on page 3, of said contract, the parties state that it is and was the intent of the said Wesley Slocum, that the deed and assignments therein mentioned were to and did pass out of the possession and control of the said Wesley Slocum, and that they were delivered to the said Clark & Dwinell absolutely, to be held by them in escrow for the proper parties; time alone being wanting for the’ complete delivery thereof.. That with special reference to the last part of the last sentence in said paragraph which reads as follows, ‘and this contract shall then take effect, ’ parties state that said contract is in no manner related to the said deed and assignments, and the time and manner in which delivery thereof shall be complete, but that such sentence was inserted therein for the reason that at the time of the execution of said contract, the said Wesley Slocum was under temporary guardianship and his property in the possession of the guardian; that there remained no property in the hands of the said Wesley Slocum to pay or turn over to Frank Slocum for his services, hence it was agreed and understood between them that the said Frank Slocum was to continue with the caring for and nursing of the said Wesley Slocum during the pendency of the guardianship proceedings, and that Frank Slocum, was to accept from the guardian a contract for the care of Wesley Slocum and be paid therefor by the guardian, in order that the said Frank Slocum would have funds with which
Ordinarily, this court would not be justified in prolonging its opinion to set out in haeo verba all the foregoing writings; but, as the rights of the parties will be largely determined by their legal force and effect, and as they serve also to illuminate the merits of the fact controversy, we have preferred to quote them at large, rather than to venture upon their abbreviation. The lines of contention were formed very soon after Slocum’s death. The conveyance of the homestead to Frank, deed for which had been deposited in escrow with the contract of May 16, 1916, was revealed to the other parties by being placed on record on the day of the grantor’s funeral. This was the signal for the war which has followed. On February 20, 1919, this action was begun to set aside saicLdeed, as having been obtained by fraud and undue influence, and without consideration. The execution of the contract made between Frank and deceased on June 16, 1916, and deposited in escrow, by which deceased was to assign to Frank the note and mortgage for $8,000 and the note and mortgage for $19,400, was not made known to the plaintiffs until after this suit was in progress; whereupon the petition was amended to set them aside on the same grounds assigned for a cancellation of the deed of the homestead.
The trial court, after hearing a large mass of testimony, found for the plaintiffs, and set aside and canceled the deed of
I. It is the theory of the plaintiffs, and so charged in the petition, that, at the date of the contract of May 16, 1916, under which instrument the defendant claims to have acquired ownership of the property in controversy, Wesley Slocum was mentally incompetent to make a valid contract, and that his execution of the paper was obtained by undue influence. Upon this issue much evidence was offered on both sides. It is entirely too voluminous for its restatement here. It is enough to say that the case in this respect is typical of a class with which all our courts are familiar. Upon the general propositions of law applicable to issues of mental incompetency and undue influence, there is little room for argument, and the authority of the many precedents cited by counsel for appellants is the subject of no serious question. The trouble, if any, comes not in the statement of the law in the abstract, but in its application to concrete cases, which are rarely entirely parallel. This case, while having features quite similar to those found in the cited authorities, is not without others of a peculiar and unusual character. Wesley Slocum, at the age of about 80 years, found himself practically alone. His wife was dead, and his children had scattered, maintaining or building up homes of their own in four several states. So far as appears, his relations with them were then entirely amicable. There is no indication that he had any disposition to favor any one of them in preference to the others, or that he was under any special obligation to any one of them. His health was so impaired and his eyesight so dim that he felt himself unequal to bear the burden of the management of His estate, consisting of real property and personalty to the value of at least $30,000. It was under the stress of these circumstances that he tried for a short time the experiment of a voluntary guardianship. From the date of his second stroke, in May, 1916, he was substantially helpless, and became wholly dependent on others. For a time, his daughter from Illinois was with him, and with her help and that of Thomas and hired servants, he received proper care and attention until Frank came from Nebraska, in January, 1917, and assumed that duty for an agreed compensation of $2,500 per year; and this status was maintained until
It was perhaps natural that the children other than Frank should view the installment of Frank in the immediate charge of the father, and his proposal to remove the old man to Nebraska, with a degree of disfavor, or even jealousy. Some of them believed that, when visiting their father, they were given no opportunity to see him or"talk with him alone; and they appear to have suspected a purpose on Frank’s part to absorb the estate, to the disadvantage of the rest of the family. On the other hand, Frank’s admitted conduct in obtaining in a secret or furtive way the contract and deed of May 16,1918, giving him
That Slocum was a proper subject of guardianship, even though still having testamentary capacity, is not open to dispute in this collateral proceeding; but even if that question were before us, we think the fact is clearly established. See Seerley v. Sater, 68 Iowa 375; Garretson v. Hubbard, 110 Iowa 7; Ockendon v. Barnes, 43 Iowa 615; Emerick v. Emerick, 83 Iowa 411; Guthrie v. Guthrie, 84 Iowa 372; Smith v. Hickenbottom, 57 Iowa 733, 734.
It is to be further said that the alleged contract appears upon its face to recognize the legal insufficiency of the instrument as a contract, and to indicate only a tentative purpose to so dispose of the property, in the event that the guardianship proceedings be finally dismissed. This quite clearly appears from the provision found in the writing which reads as follows:
“It being expressly agreed and understood by the parties hereto that this contract and copy as well as said assignments and deed hereinbefore mentioned shall be delivered to and remain in the hands of Clark & Dwinell as agents for both of us until such time as the said temporary guardianship shall have been disposed of and my property released to me, or at my death in case I do not survive such proceedings when they shall be delivered to the present parties by our said agents and this contract shall then take effect.”
It' follows, we think, both from the legal incapacity of Slocum to enter into such an agreement and from the express recognition of that fact by the terms of the instrument itself, that the trial court did not err in holding it to be void and of no effect. ¥e do not overlook the writing entitled “Supple
Counsel on either side have quite elaborately argued the
He has been paid the agreed value of his services to the deceased; he has paid no part of the promised consideration for such transfer of title; he succeeds to his equal share as an heir of the deceased; and the decree appealed from affords him no just ground of complaint. The decree of the district court is— Affirmed.