IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 20-0137
Filed June 16, 2021
RONALD LAINE KING, LILLIE LORRAINE JACKSON, and MONA RAY
BENNETT,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
vs.
WARD ELWYN SMITH and CAROLYN STANLEY,
Defendants-Appellants.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Davis County, Shawn R. Showers,
Judge.
The sibling-appellants challenge the district court ruling granting the nieces-
and nephew-appellees’ petition to partition family farmland. AFFIRMED IN PART
AND REVERSED IN PART.
R.E. Breckenridge of Breckenridge Law P.C., Ottumwa, for appellants.
Edward E. Cox of Craver, Grothe & Cox, LLP, Centerville, for appellees.
Heard by May, P.J., and Greer and Schumacher, JJ.
2
GREER, Judge.
The best made plans can be defeated without the proper tools. We see that
scenario play out in this legal dispute over family farmland. The plaintiffs, Ronald
King, Lillie Jackson, and Mona Bennett, are siblings. They are the nephew and
nieces of the defendants, Ward Smith and Carolyn Stanley. The plaintiffs brought
the underlying suit, seeking to partition the family farmland as conveyed by their
grandparents, Charley and Lillie Smith, in 1974.1 Relying on later deeds executed
by Lillie Smith that left out the plaintiffs’ mother, Mona Vee King, from inheriting the
property, the defendants denied the plaintiffs had any interest in the farmland 2 and
asked the court to quiet title in their names.
The district court granted the plaintiffs’ petition for partition, finding only the
1974 deed was valid and the language of that deed established a life estate in Lillie
Smith, which limited her ability to later divest the plaintiffs’ mother of her interest.
For the same reasons, it denied the defendants’ request to quiet title in their
names. On appeal, the defendants argue the intention of the grantor should
control and we should recognize the conveyances even if their use has not been
authorized in Iowa.
1 We generally refer to individuals by their first and last names throughout, as
multiple people in this family share first names or last names.
2 As explained later in this opinion, a separate document required Ward Smith and
Carolyn Stanley to pay a total of $25,000 to Mona Vee King’s children upon her
demise. The record contains no information establishing the basis for that number
or if that payment was to compensate the children for their mother’s share in the
real estate.
3
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
In February 1974, Charley and Lillie Smith executed a “warranty deed,” in
which they conveyed the family farm to their children, Mona Vee King, Carolyn
Stanley, and Ward Smith, as tenants in common. The deed also included this
language:
Grantors herein reserve unto themselves, and each of them,
or the survivor of them, for their natural lives or the natural life of the
survivor of them, all the rights of possession, rents and profits of the
above described real estate, and further reserve unto themselves,
each of them, or the survivor of them, the right to mortgage, sell, or
transfer said property for and during their natural life and the natural
life of the survivor of them, in accordance with Supreme Court
decisions of the State of Iowa, without the consent of the grantees
herein. It is understood by grantors herein that they are creating or
retaining an estate in joint tenancy with right of survivorship in the
above described property for themselves as husband and wife.
The deed was recorded in 1982.
Charley Smith died in approximately 1993.3
On June 1, 2006, Lillie Smith executed another “warranty deed” for the
same farmland.4 With the 2006 deed, Lillie attempted to convey the property to
just two of her children—Carolyn Stanley and Ward Smith—as tenants in common.
The mother of the plaintiffs, Mona Vee King, was excluded from this deed. The
deed included similar language as the 1974 deed, stating:
Grantor herein reserves unto herself, for her natural life, all the rights
of possession, rents and profits of the above described re[a]l estate,
and further reserves unto herself, the right to mortgage, sell, or
transfer said property for and during her natural life, in accordance
with Supreme Court decisions of the State of Iowa, without the
consent of the grantees herein.
3 The record contains conflicting detail about Charley’s year of death.
4 Carolyn Stanley drafted the 2006 warranty deed signed by her mother.
4
The same day, Lillie Smith executed a “directive and agreement,” in which
she said she was “attempt[ing]” to explain her decision to exclude Mona Vee King
from the 2006 conveyance. It said, in part:
All of my children worked equally hard and contributed in
various manners to assist their father and me in paying for this farm.
The family is aware that Mona Vee King has received State funds to
pay for extended and ongoing medical care in the amount of
thousands of dollars; it would not be fair that two of my children
should be penalized for a debt created by the other one of my
children should the State of Missouri attach a lien to an interest in my
farm. With this in mind it is my decision to make the above
conveyance excluding Mona Vee King. It is with much love and a
request for her understanding that I have made this decision.
It is my express directive to my daughter Carolyn Stanley and
my son Ward Elwyn Smith that upon Mona Vee King’s demise they
are to pay the sum of Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00), in
equal shares to Mona Vee King’s heirs; specifically stated: Laine
King, Lillie Lorraine (Lorrie) Jackson, Wayne King, Kelly King, and
Mona Rae (Missy) Bennett, each to receive the sum of Five
Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00).
Carolyn Stanley and Elwyn Smith also signed the document, and they “agree[d] to
abide by the . . . expressed desires of [their] mother.” Although Carolyn Stanley
testified her sister initiated the conversation about transferring assets because of
Mona Vee King’s health condition, the “directive and agreement” was not signed
by Mona.5
Neither the 2006 deed nor the directive and agreement were ever recorded,
and the originals were misplaced.
In July 2010, Mona Vee King died. She was survived by her five children:
Laine King, Lillie Jackson, Wayne King, Kelly King, and Mona Rae Bennett. Ward
5 Mona Vee King did execute a June 2005 quitclaim deed to her son, Floyd King,
transferring her Missouri home to him.
5
Smith and Carolyn Stanley did not make the $5000 payments to Mona Vee King’s
heirs as they had agreed under the “directive and agreement.”
Then in October 2010, after Carolyn Stanley realized the 2006 deed had
been misplaced, Lillie Smith executed another warranty deed—this one drafted by
an Iowa attorney. This deed stated it conveyed the farmland to Carolyn Stanley
and Ward Smith as “joint tenants in common with full rights of survivorship, and
not as tenants in common.” In an attached addendum, Lillie again “reserve[d] unto
herself for her natural life all the rights to possession, rents and profits of” the
farmland and “reserve[d] the right to Mortgage, sell or transfer said property for her
natural life, in accordance with Supreme Court decisions of the State of Iowa,
without the consent of the grantees herein.” With the reason for removing Mona
Vee King’s interest gone given her July death, no explanation was offered at trial
about the need for the 2010 deed. There was an attempt to have the 2010 deed
recorded, but the recorder’s office refused.
Lillie died intestate in approximately 2013 or 2014.6 No estate was opened,
and nothing happened with the farmland.
Then sometime in 2016, the plaintiffs received payments from MidAmerican
Energy Company representing their interest in farmland purchased in a sale.
Mona Bennett testified that until then “it was always our assumption that when
Mom died, our interest in the farm died.” With confirmation of the grandchildren’s
interests, in 2017, Carolyn Stanley and Ward Smith asked each of Mona Vee
King’s five children to execute quitclaim deeds regarding any interest they may
6 Again, the record is conflicting on Lillie’s year of death.
6
have in the farmland in exchange for $5000, as outlined in Lillie Smith’s 2006
directive. In June, one of Mona Vee King’s children—Kelly King—signed a
quitclaim deed for any interest he had in the farmland and conveyed it to Carolyn
Stanley and Ward Smith as tenants in common.7 He was paid $5000.
Notwithstanding that quitclaim deed, in July, all five of Mona Vee King’s
children executed a Title Standard 9.8 Affidavit,8 stating their mother died in July
2010 and the five people signing were her survivors and were in complete, actual,
and sole possession of her one-third interest in the farmland. This affidavit was
recorded by the Davis County Recorder’s Office on August 9, 2017.
About two months later, two of Mona Vee King’s children, Floyd King and
Kelly King, executed quitclaim deeds conveying their purported interest in the
farmland to their siblings—the plaintiffs.
In 2018, the plaintiffs petitioned the court to partition the family farm. They
alleged defendants Carolyn Stanley and Ward Smith each had a one-third interest
in the property, with the three plaintiffs splitting the other one-third interest. The
plaintiffs asked the court to order the land sold and the proceeds split in proportion
to each person’s interest.
The defendants responded, denying that the plaintiffs had any interest in
the family farm. Relying on the 2006 and 2010 deeds,9 they asked the court to
quiet title in their names as joint tenants.
7 Carolyn attempted to have this quitclaim deed recorded on July 31, 2017, but the
Davis County Recorder refused, citing issues with the margins on the document
and an incomplete “declaration of value” and “groundwater hazard statement.”
8 This is also known as an affidavit of heirship.
9 The 2006 deed and directive were found sometime during this action.
7
After a bench trial, the district court granted the plaintiffs’ petition to partition
the farmland and denied the defendants’ request to quiet title in their names. The
court concluded that while the 1974 deed was valid, the right to retain the “power
of disposal”—as Lillie and Charley Smith had attempted to retain for
themselves10—has not been recognized in an inter vivos transfer in Iowa (as
opposed to a testamentary transfer). The court was persuaded that the 1974,
2006, and 2010 deeds were all attempted beneficiary or transfer-on-death deeds,
and found no authority for such a deed in Iowa. Seemingly severing the language
it concluded was impermissible, the court determined a life estate was created by
this language of the 1974 deed: “Grantors herein reserve unto themselves, and
each of them, or the survivor of them, for their natural lives or the natural life of the
survivor of them . . . .” Then the court concluded that because Lillie and Charley
Smith only retained a life estate with the 1974 deed, Lillie Smith could not divest
Mona Vee King of her remainderman interest and she could not convey the same
farm property a second time—making the 2006 and the 2010 deeds invalid.
Following a successful motion to enlarge by the defendants, the district court
concluded Kelly King had conveyed his interest in Mona Vee King’s portion of the
property to Carolyn Stanley and Ward Smith by quitclaim deed in June 2017; his
later conveyance to the plaintiffs was invalid. This left Carolyn Stanley and Ward
Smith each with a 33/90 interest in the farmland, Ronald King and Lillie Lorraine
each with a 9/90 interest, and Mona Bennett with a 6/90 interest.
10 Specifically, Lillie and Charley Smith purported to retain “all the rights of
possession, rents and profits of the [property], and . . . the right to mortgage, sell,
or transfer said property for and during their natural life and the natural life of the
survivor of them . . . without the consent of the grantees herein.”
8
The defendants appeal.
II. Standard of Review.
“Actions to partition real or personal property are equitable proceedings,
which we review de novo.” Newhall v. Roll, 888 N.W.2d 636, 640 (Iowa 2016).
Similarly, “[a]ctions to quiet title are triable in equity and reviewed on appeal de
novo.” Krotz v. Sattler, 586 N.W.2d 336, 338 (Iowa 1998).11
III. Analysis.
While both the plaintiffs and the defendants presented multiple alternative
theories to the district court about who retains what interest in the farmland and
why, our first question is which, if any, of the three deeds are valid.
To begin, we start by defining some key terms and pointing out important
distinctions between them. First, “transfer-on-death” deed and “beneficiary” deed
can be used interchangeably. This type of deed “automatically conveys the
property to a designated person upon the property owner’s death”; it “avoids
probate by allowing a property owner while living to make a grant of real property
to the owner’s heirs but does not effect a change of ownership until after the
11 Under the Iowa Rules of Civil Procedure as they existed at the time plaintiffs
brought this suit, rule 1.1207 prevented counterclaims in partition actions
“[e]xcept . . . [a]ny party may perfect or quiet title to the property, or have an
adjudication of the rights of any or all parties as to any or all matters growing out
of or connected with the property . . . .” As of July 1, 2018, counterclaims in partition
actions are controlled by Iowa Code section 651.7 (2018), which states:
A party may perfect or quiet title to property that is subject to a
partition petition or request adjudication of a right of a party as to
any matter originating from or connected to the property, including
a lien between any parties. Except as permitted by this section, a
joinder of any other claim to a partition petition shall not be
permitted. A counterclaim to a partition petition shall not be
permitted.
9
grantor’s death.” Beneficiary Deed, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). With
a transfer-on-death12 deed, “[d]uring the owner’s lifetime, the beneficiaries have no
interest in the property, and the owner retains full power to transfer or encumber
the property or to revoke the [transfer-on-death] deed.” URPTDA, prefatory note
(emphasis added). A life estate is not created by a transfer-on-death deed; the
property owner retains all rights and interests in the property until their death. This
is in contrast with an “enhanced-life-estate” or “Lady Bird” deed. This deed “allows
a property owner to transfer ownership of the property to another while retaining
the right to hold and occupy the property and use it as if the transferor were still
the sole owner.” Lady Bird Deed, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019)
(emphasis added). “It is used in a few states as an estate-planning tool to avoid
probate. It enables a person to qualify for Medicaid while keeping a private
home . . . .” Id.
Here, the district court concluded Charley and Lillie Smith’s 1974 deed was
an attempted transfer-on-death deed. The defendants seem to concede as much
on appeal. They contend “no estate was actually created for the surviving children
by the 1974 deed” and point to the fact the deed explicitly contradicts that Charley
and Lillie were trying to retain a life estate as it says they were “creating or retaining
an estate in joint tenancy with right of survivorship in the above described property
12 Going forward, we choose to use only the term transfer-on-death deed. While
some states use the term “beneficiary deed,” “the term ‘transfer on death deed’ is
preferred, to be consistent with the transfer on death registration of securities.”
Uniform Real Property Transfer on Death Act, § 2 cmt.6 (Nat’l Conf. of Comm’rs
on Unif. State Laws 2009) (hereinafter URPTDA) (citing Unif. Probate Code article
VI, part 3 Uniform TOD Security Registration Act), available at:
https://www.uniformlaws.org/HigherLogic/System/DownloadDocumentFile.ashx?
DocumentFileKey=d61e6b8f-7e1b-65d1-8e97-6247f35b0150&forceDialog=0.
10
for themselves as husband and wife.” According to the defendants, what Lillie and
Charley Smith were trying to do was retain all the interest in the property for their
entire lives and then, at their deaths, have whatever remained of the property
transfer to the children without going through probate. By definition, that is a
transfer-on-death deed.
As described by the Uniform Law Commission13 (ULC) in the Uniform Real
Property Transfer on Death Act of 2009:
A small but growing number of jurisdictions have implemented the
principle of [Uniform Probate Code] Section 6-101 by enacting
statutes providing an asset-specific mechanism for the nonprobate
transfer of land. This is done by permitting owners of interests in real
property to execute and record a transfer on death (TOD) deed. By
this deed, the owner identifies the beneficiary or beneficiaries who
will succeed to the property at the owner’s death.
URPTDA, prefatory note (emphasis added).14 Thirteen states had enacted
statutes authorizing transfer-on-death deeds by 2009, when the ULC drafted the
13 The Uniform Law Commission, also known as the National Conference of
Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, is made up of lawyer-members who are
practicing lawyers, judges, legislators and legislative staff and law
professors, who have been appointed by state governments as well
as the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands
to research, draft and promote enactment of uniform state laws in
areas of state law where uniformity is desirable and practical.
The Nat’l Conf. of Comm’rs on Unif. State Laws, Overview,
https://www.uniformlaws.org/aboutulc/overview (last visited May 6, 2021).
14 Transfers of property can occur during the owner’s life, in which
case they are termed inter vivos or non-testamentary, and they are
subject to certain rules requiring intent and delivery. Transfers of
property that occur at death are termed testamentary and are subject
to different rules, usually requiring transfer according to a validly
executed will or the laws of intestate succession. . . . The [URPTDA]
has a contradiction built in when it provides that property rights do
not transfer until death in Section 5, which would make it seem
testamentary, while in Section 7, the statute declares that the TOD
deed is non-testamentary.
11
Uniform Real Property Transfer on Death Act. Id. And seventeen states plus the
District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands have done so since. The Nat’l
Conf. of Comm’rs on Unif. State Laws, Real Property Transfer on Death Act,
https://www.uniformlaws.org/committees/communityhome?communitykey=a4be2
b9b-5129-448a-a761-a5503b37d884&tab=groupdetails (last visited Feb. 12,
2021). But Iowa is not one of those states.15 See id. In fact, the Uniform Real
Property Transfer on Death Act has been introduced in the Iowa legislature at least
three times without being adopted. See Iowa Sen. File 2117, 86th Gen. Assembly,
Reg. Sess., (Feb. 8, 2016), https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/
BillBook?ga=86&ba=SF2117; Iowa Sen. File 393, 87th Gen. Assembly, Reg.
Sess. (Mar. 1, 2017), https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=87&ba=
SF393; Iowa Sen. File 2030, 88th Gen. Assembly, Reg. Sess., (Jan. 16, 2020),
https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=88&ba=SF2030.
The defendants recognize transfer-on-death deeds have not been
statutorily adopted in Iowa. And while they seem to suggest we should adopt the
use of such deeds now, they cite no authority to suggest our intermediate appellate
court has that power. See In re C.L.C. Jr., 798 N.W.2d 329, 335 n.1 (Iowa Ct. App.
2011) (recognizing that even if a party makes a persuasive argument, “as an
Danaya C. Wright & Stephanie L. Emrick, Tearing Down the Wall: How Transfer-
on-Death Real-Estate Deeds Challenge the Inter Vivos/testamentary Divide, 78
Md. L. Rev. 511, 512 n.3 (2019) (citing URPTDA §§ 5, 7).
15 “Although Iowa does recognize the concept of transferring property upon death
for securities, ‘Iowa does not allow real estate to be transferred with [revocable life
estate] deeds;’ therefore, Iowa has generally refrained from adopting the uniform
act and has not recognized the deed at the common law.” Brody Swanson, Note,
Allowing Farmers to “Take Back” What’s Theirs: Adoption of the Revocable Life
Estate Deed, 21 Drake J. Agric. L. 409, 414–15 (2016).
12
intermediate appellate court we must follow the precedents of our supreme court”);
see also State v. Wahlert, 379 N.W.2d 10, 14 (Iowa 1985) (considering “public
policy concerns” and recognizing “the need for judicial restraint and deference to
the legislature” because “the legislature has the expertise to” address them). And
even if we considered recognizing this deed format, without legislative guidance or
structure, we open our citizens to “uncertainties that lead to significant legal
consequences.” Stephanie Emrick, Note, Transfer on Death Deeds: It Is Time to
Establish the Rules of the Game, 70 Fla. L. Rev. 469, 494 (2018).
We agree with the district court that the 1974 deed executed by Lillie and
Charley Smith was a transfer-on-death deed, which was not authorized in Iowa at
the time and which we do not sanction now. The question is how to handle the
use of the unauthorized deed. The district court’s remedy was to seemingly
disregard the language it deemed impermissible and simply give effect to the rest,
concluding the deed was valid and Charley and Lillie retained a life estate with
limited rights to the land. There is some support for that ruling in the context of a
testamentary situation. See Tague v. Tague, 85 N.W.2d 22, 25–26 (Iowa 1957)
(holding that where language in a will granting a life estate to the wife conflicted
with language giving an unlimited right of disposal, the later language could be
construed as a gift of an estate in fee, but considering the will as a whole, the
subsequent limitation reduced the gift to a life estate in the property with power to
sell subject to the remainderman interest). But we disagree with the remedy
provided by the district court. First, it ignores the intention of Charley and Lillie;
the face of the deed clearly states they meant to retain a joint tenancy with right of
survivorship. See Yeager v. Farnsworth, 145 N.W. 87, 88 (Iowa 1914) (“We must
13
look to the instrument itself for the intent of the grantor, and the nature of the estate
granted.”). Second, the district court’s remedy accomplishes what the legislature
has not approved.
We recognize the stated intention of Lillie and Charley—to both convey the
family farm to their children in an inter vivos conveyance while keeping all rights
and interests in the property for themselves during their lifetimes—is at odds with
what one can do with a deed under Iowa law. Generally a deed duly executed and
recorded raises a presumption of delivery. See Jeppesen v. Jeppesen, 88 N.W.2d
633, 637 (Iowa 1958). But when the grantors do not surrender dominion over the
property and the deed is not drawn to create a life estate, such delivery will not
pass title. Id. at 638, see also Robinson v. Loyd, 109 N.W.2d 619, 622 (Iowa 1961).
Here, as in Robinson, the 1974 deed is cogent evidence that there was no delivery
and no intent to convey the property to the grantees because Charley and Lillie
retained their rights to joint survivorship. “The primary rule of construction
[concerning a deed] is that the real intention of the parties, particularly that of the
grantor, is to be sought and carried out whenever possible or when not contrary
to, or violative of, settled principles of law or statutory prohibitions.” 23 Am. Jur.
2d Deeds § 194 (Feb. 2021 Update) (citations omitted). We find language in the
1974 deed to be unable to be harmonized, and, therefore, its terms are repugnant.
A repugnancy is “[a]n inconsistency or contradiction between two or more parts of
a legal instrument.” Repugnancy, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). The
doctrine of repugnancy makes the deed void. “It has long been the rule of this
state that a restraint on alienation whether by deed or will is unlawful and void.” In
re Est. of Cawiezell v. Coronelli, 958 N.W.2d 842, 845 (Iowa 2021) (citing Crecelius
14
v. Smith, 125 N.W.2d 786, 788–89 (Iowa 1964) (finding a provision of a deed void
for repugnancy)); see Dolan v. Newberry, 215 N.W. 599, 601 (Iowa 1927) (finding
where the deed conveyed an interest in fee, any subsequent language limiting the
interest would be disregarded as repugnant); see also Emrick, 70 Fla. L. Rev. at
481 (“Should a transfer on death deed fail to operate as a matter of law, the probate
system serves as a standby to distribute the decedent's property.”); 2 Patton and
Palomar on Land Titles § 333 Transfer on Death Deeds/Beneficiary Deeds (3d ed.
Nov. 2020 update) (“Deeds containing language indicating that the grantor did not
intend to transfer title to the grantee until the grantor's death are void, because
they attempt to perform the function of a will without complying with the statute of
wills.” (citation omitted)).
“Every conveyance of real estate passes all the interest of the grantor[s]
therein, unless a contrary intent can be reasonably inferred from the terms used.”
Iowa Code § 557.3 (2018). And from the language of the 1974 warranty deed we
understand what Charley and Lillie intended.
The primary rule of construction is that the real intention of the
parties, particularly that of the grantor, is to be sought and carried out
whenever possible, when contrary to no settled rule of property which
specifically ingrafts a particular meaning upon certain language, or
when not contrary to, or violative of, settled principles of law or
statutory prohibitions.
In re Fleck’s Est., 154 N.W.2d 865, 867 (1967) (emphasis added). And in the 1974
deed Lillie and Charley Smith specifically confirmed the instrument must operate
“in accordance with Supreme Court decisions of the State of Iowa.” What the
couple did not know was that vehicle (their “warranty deed”) was not the
appropriate tool under Iowa law. Charley and Lillie wanted to retain control as
15
tenants with rights of joint survivorship but provide the land at their death equally
to their children and avoid probate. But because the transfer-on-death deed is not
condoned under Iowa law, the deeds as drafted are unenforceable. Charley and
Lillie retained their status of joint tenants with full rights of survivorship.
The 2006 and 2010 deeds were also attempted transfer-on-death deeds.
In those deeds, Lillie attempted to retain all the same rights as she and Charley
had in the 1974 deed; the language as to the rights is identical and the defendants
stipulated at trial that the language in the 2006 deed was copied from the 1974
deed. Carolyn Stanley testified her mother “wanted the same deed drawn just like
what she and Dad had executed in the ‘70s.” Because the 2006 and 2010 deeds
were also transfer-on death deeds, they are also void. Since a void deed is
unenforceable, and Lillie Smith died intestate, the property must pass through the
estate of Lillie Smith. See Iowa Code §§ 633.210; 633.219.
Alternatively, the defendants appear to argue that with the 1974 deed,
Charley and Lillie Smith could properly create or retain a life estate and retain all
“powers of disposal.”16 Although they do not use this term, we understand the
defendants to be advocating for an enhanced-life-estate deed. They point to Iowa
case law where the “power of disposal” has been recognized before. However, as
the plaintiffs respond and the defendants concede, our supreme court has only
recognized the right to retain the power of disposal in testamentary rather than
16“A power of disposal is a power given a life tenant to sell or dispose of the corpus
and use the proceeds whenever income is insufficient to meet some standard set
by the donor, such as support and maintenance, or comfort, or enjoyment and
satisfaction.” Edward S. Mraz, Estate Planning—Life Estate with Power of
Disposal, 32 Notre Dame L. Rev. 141, 141 (1956).
16
inter vivos conveyances. In other words, those cases involve a property
conveyance by will rather than a deed. See, e.g., Steiff v. Seibert, 105 N.W.2 328,
329 (Iowa 1905) (ruling the husband’s will conferred “a life estate only upon the
widow with an added power of disposal . . . and confer[red] upon the devisees
named therein a vested remainder in so much of the property as the widow may
not have disposed of during her lifetime”). And again, Iowa is not one of the few
states that have recognized enhanced-life-estate deeds. See American Council
on Aging, How Lady Bird Deeds Protect a Medicaid Recipient’s Home for Their
Loved Ones, https://www.medicaidplanningassistance.org/lady-bird-deeds/ (July
13, 2020) (“At the time of this writing, the following states allow lady bird [or
enhanced-life-estate] deeds: Florida, Michigan, Texas, Vermont, and West
Virginia.”). This alternative argument does not save the 1974, 2006, or 2010 deed
from being void.
IV. Conclusion.
While we agree with the district court that the 1974, 2006, and 2010 deeds
were attempted transfer-on-death deeds, because such a deed is not authorized
under Iowa law, we find the deeds void. Because void deeds are unenforceable
and Lillie Smith died intestate, the property must pass through the estate of Lillie
Smith.
AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART.