178 Iowa 593 | Iowa | 1916
It is shown that the plaintiff herein and the defendants, Cora Patty-Payne, Reno R. Patty and May Patty-Clark, are the only children of Rhoda J. and Seth Patty, both now deceased. Rhoda died in 1900, and Seth in 1914. They were in possession of the property in question until their death. One of the defendants was born in 1865, and another in 1870, or about five years after the execution of the deed in 1865. About September 5, 1865, Lucinda Davis and Isaac J. Davis deeded to Rhoda J. Patty and Seth Patty the lands described in the petition, and this deed provides:
“In consideration of natural love and affection and the sum of $50 in hand paid by Rhoda Jane Patty, of Dallas County, Iowa, do hereby convey unto the said Rhoda Jane Patty and Seth Patty, her husband, in trust for Swain Patty, Cora Matilda Patty and the infant daughter of said Rhoda Jane Patty and Seth Patty, and such other children as may be bom to the said Rhoda Jane Patty and Seth Patty, and such children as may be born to the said Rhoda Jane Patty by any subsequent marriage, in case her present ■ husband should die first and she should again marry, — the following described real estate, situated in Dallas County and state of Iowa, to wit: ... ■
“The said Rhoda Jane Patty and Seth Patty are to have and to hold said premises, together with all rents and profits of the same, during their lives, but they are to have no power to dispose of or sell any part of the same, and’at their death it is to become the property in fee simple of the children of the said Rhoda Jane Patty aforesaid. ’ ’
On December 9, 1878, the property was sold for taxes to Cora M. Patty, she being one of the children named in the foregoing deed, and, on April 8, 1882, the county treasurer executed a deed to her. February 21, 1899, said Cora and
“The grantors herein especially reserve to themselves and to each other, or either of them, the said Rhoda J. Patty and Seth Patty, so long as they, or either of them, shall live, the possession, use and benefit and rents and profits of the real estate herein described. ’ ’ ■
This deed was duly recorded June 13, 1899. It is the claim of the defendants that by these transactions the plaintiff was cut out of any interest in the land. This suit was brought in September, 1914, plaintiff claiming that he is entitled to a one-fourth interest, by reason of the deed from Lucinda Davis and Isaac J.- Davis to Rhoda J. and Seth Patty in 1865, as he is one of the remaindermen named in said deed. It appears that plaintiff left home in 1874, when he was 22 years old, and went to live with his grandmother, Lucinda Davis, the grantor in the trust deed, and lived with her until 1878, when he was married; then moved to Linden, in Dallas County, Iowa, where he remained until 1884; and then he went to Greene County, Iowa, where they remained for ten and a half years. Plaintiff testifies that, during this period, while he and his wife were living in Greene County, and while visiting plaintiff, one of the defendants told him that they had got Mrs. Cora M. Patty, his sister, paid back for the taxes on the farm, and that this was the only time anything was ever said to plaintiff by his brothers or sisters in relation to the taxes on the place. Plaintiff at no time had any actual notice that his sister Cora had taken a tax deed to the property, until after this suit was begun, though, as before stated, the deed was recorded. Plaintiff was not aware of the tax deed prior to his mother’s death, or at any time thereafter, other than such constructive notice as the recording thereof imparts. It appears, also, that some of the defend
1. Appellants’ first contention is that, under the deed from Lucinda and Isaac J. Davis to Rhoda J. and Seth Patty, in 1865, the grantees took simply a life estate, remainder to the persons therein named; that said deed was not a trust deed; and that the grantees therein did not hold said property in trust for said children, and in support of their contention cite 3 Pomeroy’s Equity, pp. 1908-1911; Dillenbeck v. Pinnett, 121 Iowa 201. On the other hand, appellee contends that the instrument was a trust deed, and cites, to sustain his contention, Fetter on Equity, page 174; 3 Pomeroy’s Equity, Sec. 1009; Words and Phrases, Vol. 8, page 7119.
We are inclined to take appellee’s view of the matter. But we do not determine that point, because that question is not controlling, for the reason that, in any event, under the deed, plaintiff was one of the remaindermen and entitled to a one-fourth interest in the land, unless he has been cut out by the execution of the tax deed and other deeds, executed subsequent thereto.
2. The determination of the case turns, as we view it, upon the validity of the tax deed. Appellee argues that, as the grantees in the deed'of 1865, Rhoda J. and Seth Patty, received the rents and profits of the farm, they were bound to keep up the taxes. They cite on this, Olleman v. Kelgore, 52 Iowa 38; Booth v. Booth, 114 Iowa 78, 79. Appellee fur
The .evidence does not show an ouster of any of the cotenants. We do not understand appellants to dispute the legal propositions advanced by .appellee, except they claim that the case of Crawford v. Meis, supra, is in point, and an authority for appellants. But that case is readily distinguishable from the instant ease. In that case, the life tenants allowed the property to be sold for taxes, and it was purchased at the tax sale by a’brother of one of the life tenants,
Appellants seek to avoid the force of appellee’s authorities by the claim that there was a parol agreement between Cora M. and her mother and the other defendants, by which defendants were to pay Cora M. their proportion of the taxes paid by her, and that Cora should deed the land to her mother, who, with her husband, would deed it back to Cora and the other heirs, other than plaintiff, and that the deeds were executed pursuant to such agreement. Their contention at this point is that an executed express trust in real estate may be shown by parol evidence, and that such evidence is not excluded by Section 2918 of the Code. They cite authorities to sustain this contention.
One difficulty with appellants’ contention at this point is that, if the original deed created a trust, then such an arrangement as was attempted to be carried out by appel
For the reasons given, we are of opinion that the decree of the district court was right, and it is, therefore — Affirmed.