Court Opinion

ID: 3165266
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-12-23 18:03:39.250884+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:56:59.266121
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                    No. 13-0876
                             Filed December 23, 2015

GEORGE W. GLEASON and THEODORE ALAN GLEASON,
TRUSTEES OF THE THEODORE ALAN GLEASON TRUST,
    Partition Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

GAYLE F. GLEASON,
     Partition Defendant-Appellee
________________________________________________________________

       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Pocahontas County, Kurt L. Wilke,

Judge.

       Two brothers appeal an order approving the partition and sale of their

deceased mother’s home and ordering distribution of the sale proceeds.

AFFIRMED.

       George W. Gleason, Gilmore City, and T. Alan Gleason, Camarillo,

California, appellants pro se.

       Dani L. Eisentrager, Eagle Grove, for appellee Gayle Gleason.

       Michael N. Gleason, Gilmore City, appellee pro se.

       Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Potterfield and McDonald, JJ.
                                          2

VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge.

          Two brothers appeal an order approving the partition and sale of their

deceased mother’s home and ordering distribution of the sale proceeds. They

take issue with the district court’s decision to reimburse their sister for

improvements she made to the home. They point to prior court orders denying

her request and argue those orders precluded re-litigation of the question.

I.        Background Facts and Proceedings

          Dorothy Gleason owned a home and farmland. She had six children—

Michael, David, Theodore, Gayle, Margaret, and George—to whom she left the

property on her death. See Gleason v. Korde, No. 12-2025, 2014 WL 4628912,

at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept. 17, 2014).

          Discord developed among four of the siblings.1 Gayle and Michael filed a

petition for declaratory judgment seeking the creation of a trust and appointment

of a trustee “to manage and maintain the property.”         Theodore and George

resisted and sought a partition sale of the properties. In response, Gayle and

Michael amended their petition to seek reimbursement for various expenses,

including $55,232 in “substantial improvements increasing [the] value of” the

home.

          Following trial, the district court granted Theodore and George’s request

for partition and sale of the home and, under a contract theory, denied Gayle’s

request for reimbursement of improvement expenses.

          Gayle moved for enlarged findings and conclusions, asserting in part that

the partition action should not have been joined with her petition for declaratory

1
     Two siblings passed away.
                                        3

judgment and she should have been the one to benefit from the increase in the

home’s value. The court addressed and overruled the joinder portion of the

motion, denied the severance motion for past proceedings, and severed future

proceedings.     The court did not specifically address Gayle’s argument

concerning her improvements but “overrule[d] without further discussion the other

issues.”

      Only Michael appealed. See Gleason, 2014 WL 4628912, at *1. This

court concluded that Michael conveyed all his rights and interest in the property

to Gayle while his appeal was pending, losing a personal and legal interest in the

dispute.   See id. at *2.   The court nonetheless addressed and denied his

argument on the merits. Id. at *3-4.

      Meanwhile, the severed partition action proceeded in the district court,

with a referee’s issuance of a report of sales and a request for directions to make

a distribution. The report listed a home appraisal value of $48,000 and a sale

price of $91,000 and included a proposed distribution based on each co-owner’s

percentage of ownership, without consideration of the cost of improvements.

      Gayle, who was the successful bidder on the home, objected to the report.

She argued the increased value of the home should be distributed to her. A

different district court judge than the judge presiding over the first action

approved the report but agreed Gayle should be reimbursed for the

improvements she made.

      Theodore and George filed a motion to enlarge.            The district court

summarily denied the motion.
                                        4

      On appeal, Theodore and George raise a number of arguments, all

centered on the district court’s decision to credit Gayle for the home

improvements. Their primary contention is that the second district court judge

“erred in the severed and later partition action by ignoring the findings, orders

and Decree of the Court in [the] earlier action.” This argument implicates the

doctrine of issue preclusion. See Restatement (Second) Judgments § 27, at 250

(1982) (“When an issue of fact or law is actually litigated and determined by a

valid and final judgment, and the determination is essential to the judgment, the

determination is conclusive in a subsequent action between the parties, whether

on the same or a different claim.”). Our review is de novo. See In re Estate of

Woodroffe, 742 N.W.2d 94, 101 (Iowa 2007) (“Partition actions are equitable

actions which we review de novo.”).

II.   Issue Preclusion

      “Issue preclusion prevents parties from re-litigating in a subsequent action

issues raised and resolved in [a] previous action.” Emp’rs Mut. Cas. Co. v. Van

Haaften, 815 N.W.2d 17, 22 (Iowa 2012) (internal quotation marks and citation

omitted).

             The party invoking issue preclusion must establish four
      elements: (1) the issue in the present case must be identical,
      (2) the issue must have been raised and litigated in the prior action,
      (3) the issue must have been material and relevant to the
      disposition of the prior case, and (4) the determination of the issue
      in the prior action must have been essential to the resulting
      judgment.

Id.
                                             5

       We begin and end with the first requirement: identity of issues. At first

blush, it would appear this requirement was satisfied. In the first action, Gayle

responded to her siblings’ request for partition as follows:

       Over the course of several years, Plaintiff, Gayle F. Gleason
       personally made substantial improvements to the residence which
       was paid for by herself.        Such improvements have added
       substantial monetary and aesthetic value to the property that
       benefitted all owners. If the Court should determine that this
       property be partitioned then it should also determine how much
       Gayle F. Gleason is entitled to reimbursement for those
       improvements and her share should be proportionally increased
       according to the increase in value to the property.

(Emphasis added.) In the second action, she asserted:

       4. The auctioneer, Jon Hjelm, appraised the home at $48,000.00.
       The house sold for $43,000.00 more than the appraised value and
       the value of the home was substantially increased due to the
       improvements made and paid for solely by the Plaintiff, Gayle F.
       Gleason. These improvements were made at no cost to the other
       owners, even though they were afforded the benefits of the
       improvements while using the home for many years. Gayle F.
       Gleason expended a total sum of $55,000.00 for improvements of
       the home which added greatly to the value of the home. The
       improvements were meticulous and of exceptional value as they
       were in keeping with the original 1908 structure. The additional
       $43,000.00 from the appraised value as opposed to the sale value
       should be credited to Gayle F. Gleason for her improvements made
       to the home. (Exhibits C, D and E)

(Emphasis added.) These assertions establish that Gayle raised the same issue

in both actions and sought the same relief. But our analysis cannot end with

Gayle’s framing of the issue because the framed issue was not the issue decided

by the district court in the first action.

       In that action, Gayle made a conditional argument: if the court ordered

partition of the land, then the court should determine by how much her share

should be increased in light of the money she expended to improve the property.
                                         6

The district court decided a different issue—whether the co-owners agreed to

reimburse Gayle for her expenditures.        The court found and concluded as

follows:

               No contract or agreement existed between the co-owners for
       these improvements. There is no evidence that all of the owners
       were aware of the improvements. Gayle testified that she did not
       intend to be reimbursed for these improvements. Her demand is a
       response to the partition.
               There is no legal or equitable basis for the reimbursement of
       these expenses. Gayle was in a semi-fiduciary capacity with some,
       if not all, of the co-owners. Until now, no one, including Gayle,
       thought that she would demand reimbursement. George testified
       that it was unwise to make these improvements to a house of this
       age in a small farming community. At a minimum, the co-owners
       were entitled to consent to this obligation. There is no proof that
       these improvements increased the resale value of the home. The
       Court finds that Gayle should not be reimbursed for these
       improvements.

The court premised its denial of relief on the absence of a contract and the

absence of co-owner consent to the improvements. Significantly, the court found

Gayle’s request for reimbursement was “a response to the partition.” But, after

ordering partition, the court left the mechanics of partition and distribution for a

separate action.

       In the second action, the district court addressed the question of whether

Gayle should receive reimbursement for the improvements in light of the sale of

the home at a significantly greater price than the assessed value of the home.

The court stated:

       Gayle still seeks reimbursement in the amount of $55,232.00 for
       improvements to the home which she alone paid. She testified that
       had the home not been sold in her lifetime, as she expected it
       would not, she would have been content and satisfied to enjoy the
       improvements without seeking contribution from her siblings, but
       since the home has been sold she argues that she should be
       reimbursed for her payment for updates, otherwise George is
                                           7

       unjustly enriched at Gayle’s expense. The assessed value of the
       home, even after the improvements, is $28,231.00 (Gleason Exhibit
       #1). Subtracting Gayle’s requested $55,232.00 from the net
       proceeds of $83,052.20 from the sale of the home leaves a net
       balance of $27,820.20 to be divided between the owners.

The court addressed the issue preclusion argument raised by Theodore and

George as follows:

       George argues that [the first judge’s] order . . . denying Gayle’s
       request for reimbursement is res judicata and that the entire
       $83,052.20 should be divided between he and Gayle according to
       their ownership interests. This court disagrees. [The first judge’s ]
       ruling was based upon the facts presented in Pocahontas County
       file #EQCV126201. There, Gayle requested that in the event the
       home was sold her share of the sale proceeds should be
       “proportionally increased according to the increase in the value to
       the property’’ caused by her improvements. In denying her request,
       [the judge] found that (1) there was no agreement among the heirs
       for contribution to those expenses, and (2) there was no proof that
       the improvements increased the value of the home. Now, through
       the partition we know that the heirs were all aware of Gayle’s
       proposed improvements and no objections were offered and we
       know that the improvements added value to the home as it sold for
       $62,769.00 above its assessed value. The facts changed since
       [the first] decree and equity demands that Gayle be reimbursed for
       her out-of-pocket improvement expenses which reimbursement will
       not harm George from what his expected return would have been
       had the improvements by Gayle not been done.

Although the second court focused on changed facts in declining to apply the

ruling of the first court, we believe the distinction is one of law. In the first action,

the court applied a contract theory to deny Gayle’s request for recovery of

improvement expenses. In the second, the court applied partition principles to

allow her request.

       We recognize this is a nuanced distinction. See Restatement (Second) of

Judgments § 27 (1982) (“One of the most difficult problems in the application of
                                           8

the [issue preclusion] rule . . . is to delineate the issue on which litigation is, or is

not, foreclosed by the prior judgment.”). But it is one supported by precedent.

       In Indra v. Wiggins, 28 N.W.2d 485, 490-96 (Iowa 1947), the court had to

decide how the value of certain real estate improvements should be allocated

between co-owners of the property. There was no dispute one of the co-owners

made all the improvements. Indra, 28 N.W.2d at 488-89. The other co-owner

sought a monetary benefit from the improvements. Id. The Iowa Supreme Court

discussed two rules, one based in law and the other in equity:

               Another factor akin to that of good faith is the matter of the
       knowledge or consent of other cotenants with respect to the
       improvements.         Of course, ordinarily, one cotenant cannot
       voluntarily improve the common property, and then by direct action,
       particularly at common law, compel another cotenant to contribute
       his proportionate share thereof. He cannot thus make another
       cotenant his debtor against his will, or thereby subject the share of
       that cotenant to a charge or a lien therefor. Many decisions hold
       that this cannot be done with respect to even necessary repairs,
       unless there has been a request and a refusal of the cotenant to
       participate. [citations omitted]
               But the rule stated just above has no application in the case
       before us, or in any case where the question of the allowance of
       compensation for repairs or improvement on property held in joint
       tenancy or tenancy in common, arises in partition or accounting, in
       equity. The argument and citation of authorities by counsel for
       appellant indicates an avoidance of this distinction . . . .
               ....
               In 1 A.L.R. 1189 (see also pages to 1225) it is stated:
               While at common law a tenant in common could not
               claim contribution in an action at law for necessary
               improvements on the common property, without the
               consent of his cotenants, nevertheless, inasmuch as
               an action for partition was essentially equitable in its
               nature, a court of equity was required to take
               improvements into account when decreeing partition,
               and to award the cotenant in possession, who had
               necessarily and in good faith improved the common
               property and enhanced its value at his own cost, such
               equitable compensation as would leave only the value
               of the estate, without the improvements to be divided
                                          9

              among the tenants in common. This relief was
              granted in actions in partition in keeping with the
              familiar principle of equity jurisprudence, which
              requires that one who seeks equity must do equity.
              The rule in this behalf has been adopted and applied,
              with but rare exceptions, in every jurisdiction where
              the action for partition is considered as one calling for
              equitable interposition and relief.

Id. at 490-91. The two rules articulated by the court are precisely the rules

implicated here.

       The district court in the first action decided there was no agreement

among the co-owners to make the improvements. This conclusion implicates the

first rule summarized in Indra: “ordinarily, one cotenant cannot voluntarily

improve the common property, and then by direct action, particularly at common

law, compel another cotenant to contribute his proportionate share thereof.” Id.

The district court in the second action decided equity demanded a credit in favor

of Gayle. This conclusion implicates the second rule summarized in Indra: “a

court of equity was required to take improvements into account when decreeing

partition.” Id.; see also Mahon v. Mahon, 121 N.W.2d 103, 106 (Iowa 1963)

(“[W]hen improvements built by a cotenant enhance the value of the common

estate and the cotenants are not injured in any way, or hindered from having

partition, they should not be permitted to take advantage of the improvements, to

which they contributed nothing.”). Because the two courts invoked and applied

different rules, the issues decided by the two courts were not identical and the

district court’s ruling in the first action did not preclude the district court in the

second action from crediting Gayle with the cost of the improvements she made

to the property.
                                           10

III.   Amount of Distribution

       Theodore and George’s remaining issues deal with the amount of Gayle’s

distributive share. The district court, acting in equity, chose to credit Gayle with

the entire cost of improvements. The amount finds support in the record. We

see no reason to reduce it.

IV.    Michael’s Standing

       George filed a motion to strike Michael’s pro se appellee proof brief,

claiming Michael “has no standing in this dispute.” The Iowa Supreme Court

ordered the motion to be considered along with the appeal. This court addressed

the same issue in Michael’s prior appeal and concluded he lacked standing

because he “conveyed all of his rights and interest in the property to Gayle.”

Gleason, 2014 WL 4628912, at *2. The same holds true here, and we therefore

grant the motion to strike.

V.     Appellate Attorney Fees

       Gayle requests $5000 in appellate attorney fees. She cites no authority

for an award of appellate attorney fees.

       Our own research directs us to Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.2225, which

authorizes the court to “fix, and tax as costs, a fee in favor of plaintiff’s attorney,

in a reasonable amount, to be determined by the court.” The provision says

nothing about appellate attorney fees. In the absence of argument on whether a

request for appellate attorney fees may be read into this provision, we decline

Gayle’s request.

       AFFIRMED.