IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 20-0421
Filed June 30, 2021
KELLY ANGSTROM and CHERYL ANGSTROM,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
vs.
CALHOUN COUNTY, IOWA, MICHAEL COOPER, CARL LEGORE and SCOTT
JACOBS,
Defendants-Appellees,
_________________________________
CALHOUN COUNTY, IOWA,
Counterclaim Plaintiff,
vs.
KELLY ANGSTROM and CHERYL ANGSTROM,
Defendants to Counterclaim.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Calhoun County, Adria Kester,
Judge.
Lessors Kelly and Cheryl Angstrom appeal a district court order declaring
their lease agreement with Calhoun County void. AFFIRMED.
Ernest Kersten, Fort Dodge, for appellants.
Aaron W. Ahrendsen, John C. Werden, and Curt S. Steger of Eich Werden
Steger & Ahrendsen, P.C., Carroll, for appellees.
Considered by May, P.J., and Greer and Schumacher, JJ.
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MAY, Presiding Judge.
Contracts entered “in contravention of a statute are void, and Iowa courts
will not enforce” them. Bank of the W. v. Kline, 782 N.W.2d 453, 462 (Iowa 2010);
see Pike v. King, 16 Iowa 49, 52 (1864). The district court declared a lease
agreement void because Calhoun County (the County) failed to comply with Iowa
Code sections 331.361 and 331.305 (2019). Lessors Kelly and Cheryl Angstrom
appeal. We affirm.
I. Factual Summary
The story of this case begins with Ted and Jan George, who are not parties.
The Georges owned property located on Twin Lakes Road in Rockwell City. In
2006, the Georges had a dispute with Calhoun County about the extent of their
property. Both sides knew a quiet title action was “the one way” to resolve their
dispute. But both sides wanted to avoid litigation. So, as a compromise, the
County and the Georges entered into a lease agreement.
Significantly, the lease agreement did not resolve the parties’ dispute over
the extent of the Georges’ property. But it did lease the right to keep docks in
North Twin Lake to the Georges. In return, the Georges agreed to pay $1 per year.
The lease’s term was fifty years.
Later that year, the Angstroms bought the Georges’ property, including their
interest in the lease. Over a decade later, in 2017, the county attorney raised
concerns that the Angstroms had breached the lease agreement by, among other
things, attempting to limit the public’s access to the lake. Then in 2018, the county
attorney advised the Angstroms that the lease had been terminated because of
their alleged breaches. In a separate letter, the county attorney contended the
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lease was “void ab initio” because, before approving it, the Calhoun Board of
Supervisors had not followed the notice requirements of section 331.305.
This litigation followed. The parties filed cross-motions for summary
judgment. The district court concluded the lease was void. The Angstroms appeal.
II. Standard of Review
“We review a district court’s summary judgment ruling ‘for correction of
errors at law.’” Bandstra v. Covenant Reformed Church, 913 N.W.2d 19, 36 (Iowa
2018) (quoting Walderbach v. Archdiocese of Dubuque, Inc., 730 N.W.2d 198, 199
(Iowa 2007)). Summary judgment is proper if the record shows “that there is no
genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a
judgment as a matter of law.” Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3).
III. Analysis
Here, the facts are undisputed, and the legal issues are fairly narrow. First,
the Angstroms contend that, because the lease agreement did not trigger section
331.361(2), the County was not required to comply with the notice requirements of
331.305. Section 331.361(2)(a) provides:
In disposing of an interest in real property by sale or
exchange, by lease for a term of more than three years, or by gift,
the following procedures shall be followed, except as otherwise
provided by state law:
The board shall set forth its proposal in a resolution and shall
publish notice of the time and place of a public hearing on the
proposal, in accordance with section 331.305.[1]
1 Section 331.305 provides:
Unless otherwise provided by state law, if notice of an
election, hearing, or other official action is required by this chapter,
the board shall publish the notice at least once, not less than four nor
more than twenty days before the date of the election, hearing, or
other action, in one or more newspapers which meet the
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We look for the meaning of statutes in their texts, in the “words chosen by the
legislature.” State v. Childs, 898 N.W.2d 177, 184 (Iowa 2017) (citation omitted).
In the Angstroms’ view, section 331.361(2) did not apply because the
agreement was not a “lease” or any other “dispos[ition] of an interest in real
property.” We disagree. Numbered paragraph 1 of the “lease agreement” states:
“Lease of Disputed Property. Calhoun County, Iowa hereby leases to [the]
George[s], their successors and assigns the Property as described below and
shown on Attachment A of this Agreement.” The description “below” is a set of
boundaries for real estate. And “Attachment A” is a picture of land.
It is true, of course, the lease agreement has some severe limitations.
Paragraph 5 clarifies: “The Property is being leased . . . solely for the purpose of
placing a dock . . . .” But its limited scope does not change the lease’s basic
character. And it does not change our view that, as a matter of law, the lease
agreement was a “lease” of “an interest in real property” for purposes of
section 331.361(2).
Because section 331.361(2) applied, the County was required to comply
with the notice requirements of section 321.305. And no one claims those
requirements were met. It would appear, therefore, the lease is void. See Miller
v. Marshall Cnty., 641 N.W.2d 742, 750–51 (Iowa 2002) (“If a municipality fails to
appropriately exercise its authority or comply with statutory procedures, the
contract is void.”).
requirements of section 618.14. Notice of an election shall also
comply with section 49.53.
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But the Angstroms claim the lease is saved by a curative provision, Iowa
Code section 589.31. It provides:
All deeds and conveyances of land executed by or purporting
to be executed by the governing body of a city or county, and placed
of record more than ten years earlier, which deeds or conveyances
purport to sustain the record title, are legalized and valid, even
though the record fails to show that all necessary steps in the
conveyance and deeding of the property were complied with. The
deeds and conveyances are legalized and valid as if the record
showed that the law had been complied with, and that the
conveyances and deeding had been duly authorized by the
governing body of the city or county.
Iowa Code § 589.31 (emphasis added).
As the district court recognized, the key question under section 589.31 is
whether the lease agreement constituted a “deed[] [or] conveyance of land . . .
purport[ing] to sustain the record title.” The Angstroms do not claim the lease
agreement was a “deed.” Instead, they argue that if the agreement is a “lease,” it
should also be considered a “conveyance of land.” Moreover, the Angstroms note,
the lease has been on file for more than ten years. In the Angstroms’ view, these
facts are enough to trigger section 589.31.
We disagree. We assume without deciding that a lease of real property
rights—however limited in scope—might qualify as a “conveyance[] of land” for
purposes of section 589.31. See Iowa Code § 4.1(13) (“The word ‘land’ and the
phrases ‘real estate’ and ‘real property’ include lands, tenements, hereditaments,
and all rights thereto and interests therein, equitable as well as legal.” (emphasis
added)); but see Tenney v. Atl. Assocs., 594 N.W.2d 11, 16 (Iowa 1999) (noting,
in the context of apartment leases, “the traditional analysis of a lease as being a
conveyance of an interest in land—with all the medieval connotations this often
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brings—was reappraised, and found lacking in several respects” (citation
omitted)).
As the district court understood, however, a “conveyance[] of land” only
triggers section 589.31 if it “purport[s] to sustain the record title.” And the
Angstroms do not argue the lease “purport[s] to sustain the record title.” So we
conclude section 589.31 does not apply.
IV. Conclusion
The district court was correct in declaring the lease agreement void.
AFFIRMED.