Dexter v. Lichtenwalter

BirdzRll, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal in an action to foreclose a real estate mortgage. Trial de novo. The facts are as follows:

In the fall of 1901, the defendant, E. B. Lichtenwalter, made a homestead entry on a quarter section of land in Foster county. The following year, his father, Solomon R. Lichtenwalter of Toledo, Iowa, purchased a half section of land in the same vicinity for $3,200. The defendant had possession of this half section from the time his father purchased it paying all the taxes, with the exception of the first year’s tax, and no rent. When the defendant had completed the proof on his homestead in 1905, he moved his improvements to the northeast quarter of section 29, township 146, range 64, which was one of the quarter sections that had been purchased by his father. He, the defendant, made other improvements there, and continued to make it his home. In 1910, the *636father conveyed his one-half section to the defendant, and at about the same time, June 15, 1910, the defendant and his wife executed four notes for $1,000 each, payable to the father, which were secured by a real estate mortgage of even date on the northeast quarter, where the defendant was living. This is the mortgage sought to be foreclosed in this action. The following October, the defendant’s father made a will which contains the following paragraph:

“I now proceed to make some specific devises and bequests but have already advanced to my daughter Geneve and to my son Bruce B. property or money in value or amount substantially equal to what I now give to my other children, I make no special devise or bequeath to them.”

He then gave about $5,000 to each of the other children. In July of the following year, 1911, the father died. The notes and mortgage in question were inventoried as part of his personal estate, and this action is brought by the executor to collect the notes and foreclose the mortgage.

In our opinion the record presents no doubtful question of law or fact. It is well established by competent evidence that the senior L,ichtenwalter had purchased this one-half section of land for his son, the defendant; that he did not have full confidence’in the son’s ability to take care of his business affairs; that he specifically disapproved of at least one doubtful venture, when the son contracted a large indebtedness in the purchase of a threshing outfit; and that, while he was desirous of transferring the land to the son, he wanted to fix it so that the defendant and his wife could not be deprived of their home through improvidence. The defendant testified without objection that his stepmother had told him that his father had stated that the notes were not to be collected. Upon direct examination the defendant was not asked concerning the transaction between himself and his father. Such evidence was doubtless conceived to be incompetent under § 7871, C. L,. of 1913. But upon cross-examination plaintiff’s counsel inquired into the transaction exhaustively, as a result of which it appeared that an arrangement existed between the defendant and the father whereby, if the defendant would move his buildings upon the father’s land, break it up and improve it, that he, the father, would deed the land to the defendant; also that the only object of the mortgage was to protect the homestead against the possibility of its being taken by creditors or voluntarily frittered away by the defendants. Since the evidence clearly establishes the transaction *637to have been of the character stated, it is clear that there was no actual consideration for the notes and the mortgage, and that at the time they were given it was understood that they did not represent an indebtedness, and that the father would not enforce collection. Furthermore, the record is devoid of any evidence tending to establish that the father ever .advanced any other moneys or property to the defendants. Thus, in the light of the will, which recites, in effect, that approximately $5,000 in money or property had been advanced to the defendant Bruce B., it must be found that this one-half section, the value of which was nc greater than this, was the property referred to as having been advanced. Clearly, it was not advanced at all if the testator held an enforceable mortgage for approximately its value.

Counsel argue that the principal defendant has practically acknowledged the indebtedness in a letter dated November 1, 1919, which was written to his• stepsister, one of the legatees. The letter is typewritten, and apparently was drafted by some one other than the defendant for his signature. It does contain a specific acknowledgement of the indebtedness, and suggests that the addressee and the other heirs give their consent for the executor to withhold foreclosure proceedings and await the collection of the notes and mortgages until final settlement of the father’s estate, at which time the amount might be deducted from the defendant’s share. The letter .in evidence is a carbon copy and is so drawn as to indicate that similar letters were sent to the other heirs and legatees with a view to effecting an amicable adjustment. The complaint alleges that a notice of intention to foreclose had previously been served upon the defendant, and the defendant testified, in substance, that he would rather have given up his interest in the estate of his father than be brought to court in this foreclosure proceeding.

We think that, in the light of the evidence showing the nature of the transaction and of the pressure that was being brought to bear to collect the notes given by the defendant, the effect of the letter as an admission is largely destroyed. We are of the opinion that the judgment is clearly right, and it is affirmed.

Grace, C. J., and Bronson, Christianson, and Robinson, JJ:, concur.