55 Iowa 55 | Iowa | 1880
On the 25th day of February, 1875, he made a division of nearly all his real estate among his children then living, in which division Jane B. Lamborn received seventy acres of land, valued in the deed at $1,600. No question has been made as to his mental capacity to perform this act. It does not appear -that he had any other stroke of paralysis, although he had another attack of sickness about June, 1875. In October, 1875, his daughter, Jane Lamborn, died. Although on good terms with this daughter, he seems always to have disliked her husband, George J. Lamborn, and it seems from the evidence that a bad feeling existed upon the part of Lam-born toward his father-in-law and his brothers-in-law. On the 1st day of December, 1875, Joseph Ball executed his will, in which he bequeathed to the heirs of his deceased daughter, Jane Lamborn, all notes and accounts which he held against her. He devised to his children, John, James and Benjamin F., all the residue of his property, both real and personal, to be divided equally between them. Afterward he seems to have conceived the idea of dividing his property amongst these three children during his lifetime, and of exacting from them an agreement to pay him $600 on the first day of January of each year thereafter, if required by him, during his life. The division was made on the 18th day of January, 1876. At this time he deeded to his sons the small remnant of his real estate, and they executed an agreement as follows:
“We, the undersigned, will give father six hundred'dollars on first month, first, 1877; same amount to him and him only*59 following first month, first, as long as he lives, if by him required. “John Ball,
January, 1876. “Jambs Ball, “B. E. Ball.”
B. E. Ball, acting under a power of attorney executed by Joseph Ball, August 20, 1875, transferred the bank stock pursuant to the division, and Joseph Ball subsequently approved the transfer and expressed himself satisfied therewith. ~We are fully satisfied that at the time of this transaction Joseph Ball was possessed of sufficient mental capacity to comprehend his relations to his property and to his children, and understandingly to dispose of his property, and we cannot find from the testimony that any influence was employed by the defendants to induce him to make such disposition. The defendants werehis only surviving children. His daughter left two children. He stated upon various occasions that they had received more than his other grandchildren would receive if the remainder of his property were equally divided between them; enough if taken care of, and if not taken care of enough to squander. It is claimed that the consideration is grossly inadequate, and that, therefore, the disposition should be set aside. But there was here the good consideration of natural love and affection, as well as the valuable consideration of the agreement for support. No fraud or imposition being shown, the good consideration was, of itself, sufficient. The case is the not unusual one of án aged man, in feeble health, and expecting at the most but a short time to live, giving his property to his children, and exacting from them an agreement for support. Joseph Ball died within less than two months after this arrangement was made, -at the advanced age of seventy-three. So far as the evidence shows no rights of creditors are involved. The disposition of the property was in accord with his purposes as expressed on various occasions; in view of all the circumstances of the case it is not so unreasonable as to raise any presumption of
Affirmed.