152 Iowa 644 | Iowa | 1911
John and Lydia Overman were husband and wife. He owned a farm that he sold in September, 1891, for nearly $15,000, she joining in the deed. Of the price so received John Overman gave his wife $4,000 on the 18th day of December, 1891, and at the same time both husband and wife signed a contract which recited that fact, and in which John Overman agreed to.give his wife a life estate in the homestead which they then occupied. The money and the homestead right were given on the following conditions:
Should the first party, John Overman, survive the said second party, then the said four thousand dollars, or any part thereof, or any. property purchased therewith, which may remain at the death of the said second party, shall revert to the said first party. Should the said second party survive the said first party, then she shall have the full use, possession and control of the homestead during her life, and at her death the said homestead and four thousand dollars, or that portion thereof, if any, and any property purchased therewith, which remains at that time, shall go in equal shares to the grandchildren of the first party. It is agreed that the amounts above referred to and received by the said second party are to be considered as an advancement to her out of the estate of the said first party, and she agrees to accept and does accept the same as above provided as her full' share of his said estate.
Lydia was the second wife of John Overman, and she died without issue. On the 10th day of October, 1895, John Overman made a will which provided that his wife, Lydia, should have the use during her life of the $4,000 already given her and the homestead, and that the remainder of both should go to his grandchildren. This will follows the terms of the agreement made in the contract of December, 1891. On the 10th day of October, 1895, Lydia Overman also signed a writing jointly with John Overman, which was designated “Acceptance of Lydia Overman,” and which instrument was fastened to the will of her husband. It was as follows:
This instrument was probated as the will of Lydia Overman, and the present action was brought to set the probate and will aside on the ground that it was procured by the undue influence of the husband, John Overman.
It is enough to say that the ruling on the objections was in the appellants’ favor, and that no exception was taken to the limitations. The court instructed that the contract of December, 1891, was of no force or effect under the statutes, but that it had been admitted in evidence as a declaration or statement of Lydia Overman, to be given such weight as it appeared to be entitled to.
The contract was clearly admissible for no other purpose than to show that the subsequent will was not the product of undue influence. Whether the contract was an. enforcible one or not could have no bearing on the case, unless it was further shown that Lydia Overman knew that it was invalid and signed it to mislead her husband, and such a showing would have been prejudicial to the defendants’ case. The contract was evidently made for the purpose of depriving the wife of her distributive share under the statute, and in so far as it related to that subject, at least, the instruction was clearly right. Code, section '3154; Caruth v. Caruth, 128 Iowa, 121; Poole v. Burnham, 105 Iowa, 620; Frazier v. Andrews, 134 Iowa, 624; Miller v. Miller, 104 Iowa, 186.
The court fairly covered the request made by the appellants in the first instruction asked by them, not in so many words perhaps, 'but the substance of the request was clearly embodied in the instructions given.
TVe find no ground calling for a reversal, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.~_