Kinney v. Newbold ( 1901 )


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  • McClain, J.

    1 2 *1473 *146It appears that Jacob S. Kinney died in 1897, leaving a will, which was duly probated, defendant being appointed executor. Among the papers of the estate was found an instrument reading as follows: “Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, March 20, 1900. I, Martin L. Kinney, son of Jacob S. Kinney, hereby acknowledge myself indebted to Mr. Jacob S. Kinney in the sum of twenty-one hundred ($2,100) dollars as an advancement on my share of his estate after his death, and I hereby agree and promise to pay said estate, with 4 per cent, interest from this date on said sum (the above amount), which is to be deducted from my interest in said estate, for value received. No statute of limitations to interfere with this agreement to -make same null and void, etc. The above being a part of my interest in said his estate. M. L. Kinney.” Some dispute arose in the settlement of the estate as to whether this obligation, signed by appellant, constituted an asset -on which appellant was liable; and finally an arrangement was made between the executor and appellant by which the instrument was surrendered to appellant on his executing a receipt as follows: “Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, Aug. 11, 1899. Peceived of J. Gr. Newbold, administrator of the estate of Jacob S. Kinney, deceased (a note treated as cash), seventeen hundred and nineteen dollars and sixty-three cents, amount due me in full from the estate of my father, Jacob S. Kinney, deceased, in final settlement *147of said estate by the administrator, J. Gi. Newbold. M. L. Kinney. $1,719.63. Voucher 23.” Appellant contends that the instrument executed by him to deceased evidenced an advancement, and not a debt, and that the subsequent execution of the will converted the advancement into a gift, under the well-recognized rule that advancements prior to the making of a will, and not by the testator deducted from or recognized as an offset to the share given by the will, will not be taken into account in reduction of a devise under the will. In re Lyon's Estate, 70 Iowa, 375; McCormick v. Hanks, 105 Iowa, 639. This instrument, however, as it seems to us, shows something more than an advancement. It is an acknowledgment of indebtedness, and includes an agreement and promise to pay the sum of money, with.interest, coupled with the further provision that the amount named is to be deducted from appellant’s interest; the evident intention being that the sum called for should not be paid until the death of Jacob S. Kinney, and that on his death it should be satisfied by deduction from any devise made to him. It is well settled that a devise to one indebted to testator does not extinguish the debt, and the amount of such indebtedness, if remaining unsatisfied until testator’s decease, 'is to be diminished, as far as necessary, for the satisfaction of the indebtedness. 2 Woerner, Administration [2d Ed.] 976; Schouler, Executors [3d Ed.] 470. It would seem, therefore, that appellant was indebted to the estate at least to the extent of his interest therein, and has no remaining claim under the will. At the time of the execution of the receipt above set out there could be a legitimate controversy as to whether appellant did not owe to the estate, beyond the amount of his interest under the will, the balance of the sum called for by his written obligation; while it might also be legitimately contended on the other hand that the obligation was evidence of a gift or advancement, which should not, to any extent, be charged against him in the distribution of the assets of the estate. *148These questions were questions of law, but not of fact. In the settlement of these controversies as to the legal effect of the instrument it could he agreed, as it was, that appellant should be relieved from liability for any sum in excess of his share in the estate, in consideration of his relinquishment of such share in full satisfaction of the obligation evidenced by the instrument. This is exactly what was done. In case of a disputed claim, the creditor is hound by an acceptance of a portion of the debt in full accord and satisfaction of the whole. 1 Cyc. Law & Proc. 329. The receipt was executed, and the written instrument was delivered to appellant and destroyed. After the execution of the receipt, the executor proceeded at once to distribute the balance of the assests of the estate, and nothing remains in his hands for further distribution. It seems clear, therefore, that the receipt, is binding as a settlement, and that the executor should not he charged with the payment of any further sum to appellant on account of the interest released by such receipt, no matter what may he the view of the court as to the legal effect of the instrument. Either of the views above suggested would support the action of the lower court, and its decision is therefore aeeirmed.

Document Info

Judges: McClain

Filed Date: 12/19/1901

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/9/2024