185 Iowa 455 | Iowa | 1919
We hold there was no election, and therefore overrule the claim of the appellants that nothing should have been allowed the claimant.
III. But that does not settle that no reduction should be made from the allowance by the court. That allowance is the utmost that appellee may have, for he has not appealed. The question is whether the allowance should not have been reduced because appellee was devised an interest in the lands described in the contract. At this point, the appellant claims there should be a deduction in the proportion that the contract land devised bears to all the contract land. The contract land is 100 acres. If all of it had been conveyed or devised, then, under the contract, nothing would be due claimant. He has title by devise to one third of this 100 acres. While it is not the contract that the right to be paid for improvements should be extinguished in whole if any 100 acres were devised, or, pro tanto, if any fractional part of any 100 acres were devised, we are of opinion that, under agreement that the claim shall be extinguished “after the premises hereinbefore described shall become the property of the second party, either by conveyance from first
IY. The remaining contention is' that it was error to allow claimant some $121 for lumber ■ purchased by claimant of one Weighton, because he had not paid therefor, but had made payment from funds in his hands as the executor of his mother. This is a question of fact. If claimant did not pay this bill, if someone else furnished this much of the improvements, appellee may not be allowed for it. The items in question are of date March 18, 20, 22, and 27, and April 5, 1909. The record shows an Exhibit No. 8, a claim made by Weighton against John Parnham, executor of the .estate of Millicent Parnham, deceased. In substance, it sets forth the items which were allowed the claimant. The claim made by Exhibit 8 was paid and satisfied on the 18th of January, 1910, by a check made to the clerk of the courts, and signed by John EL Parnham, executor, in the sum of $121.20. It is not denied that the bill was paid in this way; but it is claimed that funds which John H. Parnham, executor, had on hand in the First National Bank of Audubon at this time, and which were there in his name, as executor, were, in truth, his own private funds. Appellee asserts he borrowed $1,150 with which to pay this claim, among others, and that he borrowed it on his own note. But he testifies he signed this note as executor, as well as in his individual capacity. His third annual report, as executor, shows that this $1,150 was borrowed on December 8,, 1911, but the bill in question was paid by this check on January 18, 1910. The first annual report, which fevers from October, 1909, to October 24, 1910, shows that, at this time, the executor had a balance on hand of some $318.15. This report seems to have been filed on the 14th of December, 1910. It exhibits no claim that money has been borrowed. It is all made up of cash on hand at date of death, and from