Toney V Parker
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 23-1830
Filed July 23, 2025
JULIAN TONEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
vs.
ARTHUR PARKER, HAZEL PARKER, and the ARTHUR E. PARKER AND
HAZEL FRANCES PARKER TRUST DATED 5/26/1993,
Defendants-Appellees,
________________________________
ARTHUR PARKER, HAZEL PARKER, and the ARTHUR E. PARKER AND
HAZEL FRANCES PARKER TRUST DATED 5/26/1993,
Counterclaim Plaintiffs-Appellees,
vs.
JULIAN TONEY,
Counterclaim Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Decatur County, Terry Rickers,
Judge.
A counterclaim defendant appeals the district court’s judgment finding that
he slandered the title of the counterclaim plaintiff and awarding punitive damages.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Adam Witosky of Gribble Boles Stewart & Witosky Law, Des Moines, for
appellant.
Daniel R. Rockhold of Rockhold Law PLLC, Corydon, for appellees.
2
Considered without oral argument by Schumacher, P.J., and Buller and
Langholz, JJ.
3
LANGHOLZ, Judge.
Julian Toney wanted to buy Arthur and Hazel Parker’s rural land that he had
been renting for decades. But they repeatedly refused his offers. And then, when
the Parkers listed the land for sale, Toney took many actions to prevent its sale,
including claiming a lifetime lease of the land that allegedly caused a third party’s
offer to buy the land for $86,100 to fall through. Toney and the Parkers ended up
in court—each bringing claims against the other. Yet all that is before us now is
the district court’s judgment—after a bench trial—that Toney slandered the
Parkers’ title causing them $62,100 in special damages and that they were entitled
to $62,101 in punitive damages for this slander of title and a related trespass claim.
Toney appeals, arguing that the Parkers failed to prove their slander of title
claim and that the district court erred in awarding punitive damages. We agree
that the slander of title claim fails. Because Toney’s previous unaccepted offer to
buy the land cannot be used as the salable value of the land and the Parkers
offered no other evidence of that value, the Parkers failed to prove that they
suffered special damages—a necessary element of slander of title. And because
the court granted punitive damages for both slander of title and trespass, we
vacate that award and remand for the district court to decide the appropriate award
for only the trespass claim.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
Beginning in the 1970s, Toney and his family started renting a twenty-four-
acre parcel of land—the Y farm—from Ruth Parker. When Ruth passed away, the
property was conveyed to her son, Arthur Parker, and his wife, Hazel. The property
was later placed into a trust. Toney continued to rent the Y farm from the Parkers,
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using it for farming, cattle, and timber. He paid $200 a year in rent for the land.
Over the years, Toney offered to buy the land from the Parkers, each time being
told no. In September 2016, the Parkers put the land up for sale.
After learning the Y farm was on the market, Toney again offered to buy the
land from the Parkers. And again, they refused to sell it to him. Toney then
confronted the Parkers’ realtor while the realtor was on the land, telling the realtor
that he had a lifetime lease of the land and an option to purchase. And Toney
testified at trial that this lease was signed by him and Arthur Parker in 1974 on the
hood of a running pickup. Later, Toney also contacted the State Archaeologist’s
office to report that an Indian burial ground was on the land. Toney claims that
Ruth Parker told him about the burial ground when she was alive, but the Parkers
claim that Ruth never told them anything about this. And Toney hung signs on the
Y farm, including ones that warned that there is no building or hunting on the land,
that Iowa feedlot rules apply, and that it is a Potawatomi burial ground.
In September 2016, the Parkers received an offer from a third party to buy
the land for about $86,000. But ultimately, the sale fell through, which Hazel Parker
testified was because of Toney’s claim of having a lifetime lease on the land. And
Toney also acknowledged that his purported interest in the land was the reason
the sale fell through. After this, the Parkers filed and served Toney with an action
for forcible entry and detainer.1 The next business day, Toney recorded the
purported lifetime lease with option to purchase. The lease was forwarded to the
1 The court dismissed their case because it found that Toney had a farm tenancy
and the Parkers had not complied with the notice requirements for terminating such
a lease under Iowa Code chapter 562 (2016).
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Parkers, and they claimed that this was their first time seeing it. Indeed, Arthur
Parker denied ever signing the lease.
The Parkers served Toney with a notice of termination of his farm tenancy
in July 2017, explaining that he had until March 2018 to vacate the land. And on
the last day of his tenancy, Toney petitioned for a “temporary and permanent
injunctive order protecting [him] from [the Parkers’] efforts to seize ownership and
control of the Y farm,” a “declaratory judgment that the terms and conditions of the
life time lease” give Toney “the right to purchase the Y farm,” and a breach of
contract claim. The Parkers counterclaimed, asserting claims of slander of title,
ejectment, trespass, and quiet title and seeking punitive damages.
The Parkers then moved for summary judgment on all the claims. After
striking Toney’s resistance for multiple rules violations, the district court granted
summary judgment for the Parkers on all of Toney’s claims and on their
counterclaims for ejectment, trespassing, and quiet title. The court ordered Toney
to vacate the property within thirty days of the judgment. The court denied
summary judgement on the Parkers’ counterclaims for slander of title, damages
for trespass and ejectment, and punitive damages. During this time, Toney sent
letters to the Parkers, maintaining that he still had rights to the land and offering to
buy it for $1000 per acre—$24,000 in total. Following a bench trial on the
remaining counterclaims in October 2019, the district court found Toney liable for
slander of title and awarded the Parkers around $78,000 in damages. It also found
Toney in contempt for failing to remove his cattle and signs from the land.
Toney appealed, and our supreme court reversed both the summary-
judgment and bench-trial rulings, holding that the district court abused its discretion
6
in striking Toney’s resistance to summary judgment. See Toney v. Parker, 958
N.W.2d 202, 208–11 (Iowa 2021). So it remanded the case to be heard by a new
district judge. Id. at 211. Upon remand, the district court granted the Parkers’
summary judgment motion on all of Toney’s claims and on the Parkers’ ejectment,
trespass, and quiet title counterclaims. The court again left the issues of slander
of title, damages, and punitive damages for trial.
After a two-day bench trial, the district court ordered judgment against
Toney on the Parkers’ slander of title claim. The court found that Toney had acted
with malice and that the Parkers had suffered special damages of about $62,000.
It concluded that the lease was not signed by Arthur Parker, based on handwriting
samples and testimony from the Parkers. The court reasoned that “the purported
lease and option is a fiction and a forgery created by Toney solely to render the
title to the Y farm unmarketable.” And the court calculated the amount of damages
by taking the contract price for the sale of the Y farm—$86,100—and subtracting
the value that Toney had offered the Parkers for the land—$24,000. In assessing
damages for trespass, the court found that Toney’s trespass on the land had
diminished its value by $1 based on him putting signs up on the land and failing to
remove one of them. And the court found that the Parkers were entitled to recover
punitive damages totaling $62,101 for both their slander of title and trespass claims
and $822 in attorney fees.2
Toney now appeals.
2 The court also reconsidered its summary-judgment ruling for the Parkers on their
ejectment claim and instead dismissed it, reasoning that the claim was “not
properly joined to this action.”
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II. Slander of Title—Special Damages
To establish a slander-of-title claim, a party must prove by a preponderance
of the evidence five elements: “(1) an uttering and publication of slanderous words;
(2) falsity of those words; (3) malice; (4) special damages to the [party]; and (5) an
estate or interest of the [person] in the property slandered.” Davitt v. Smart, 449
N.W.2d 378, 379 (Iowa 1989); see also Henderson v. Millis, 373 N.W.2d 497, 506
(Iowa 1985). While Toney makes a number of arguments as to how the Parkers
failed to prove this claim, we need not go any further than the “essential element[]”
that the Parkers sustained “special damages.” Witmer v. Valley Nat’l Bank of Des
Moines, 273 N.W. 370, 371 (Iowa 1937); see also Davitt, 449 N.W.2d at 379
(reversing slander-of-title verdict where evidence was lacking for two elements).
Because the district court heard these claims in equity, our review is de novo.
Brown v. Nevins, 499 N.W.2d 736, 737 (Iowa Ct. App. 1993).
“Special damages are such as actually result from the wrongful act, but are
not such a necessary result that they will be implied by law.” Kock v. Burgess, 149
N.W. 858, 860 (Iowa 1914); cf. Hoffman v. Clark, 975 N.W.2d 656, 665 (Iowa 2022)
(describing special damages in the context of libel per se as the those “which result
from the loss of something having economic or pecuniary value” (cleaned up)).
This requirement to prove “special harm . . . in all cases” is a key difference
between slander of title and other defamation claims. Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 624 cmt. a (Am. L. Inst. 1977). The “most usual” manner of proving special
damages for slander of title is by showing a financial loss caused “by preventing a
sale to a particular purchaser.” Id. § 633 cmt. c. And that loss must be shown by
establishing the “difference between the price that would have been realized by it
8
and the salable value of the thing in question.” Id. § 633 cmt. e; see also
Montgomery Props. Corp. v. Econ. Forms Corp., 305 N.W.2d 470, 477 (Iowa 1981)
(finding no reversible error in jury instructions that followed the definition in
comment “e” for defining special damages).
Toney argues that the Parkers did not prove special damages because the
record lacks any evidence to establish the “salable value” of the land when it was
marketable. The Parkers point to, and the district court relied on, Toney’s offer to
purchase the land for $1000 per acre—a total price of $24,000—as the needed
market value to prove special damages. But generally, an “unaccepted offer for
the purpose of real estate should not be received as evidence of the value of such
real estate.” Hardaway v. City of Des Moines, 166 N.W.2d 578, 581 (Iowa 1969);
see also Danamere Farms, Inc. v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 567 N.W.2d 231, 232
(Iowa 1997) (reaffirming Hardaway and extending it to hold that even an accepted
offer of land should not have been used when the land sale failed before closing).
This makes sense because “market value” and related “terms refer to the price
which a willing buyer under no compulsion to buy would pay a willing seller under
no compulsion to sell.” Hardaway, 166 N.W.2d at 583.
The Parkers make no attempt to distinguish this case from the general rule
established in Hardaway. But even assuming this is the “exceptional case” where
an unaccepted offer could be probative on value, id. at 581, at best the unaccepted
offer would prove that the land value is at least $24,000 since Toney was willing to
buy it at that price. An unaccepted offer proves nothing about how much higher
the market value is because we do not know how low a price a willing seller would
accept. Yet unlike the condemnation-proceeding context discussed in
9
Hardaway—where a landowner is trying prove a value at least as high as the
compensation sought—here the Parkers had the burden to prove that the market
value was less than their lost sale at the price of $86,100. And proving that the
value is something more than $24,000 does not make it any more likely—and
certainly not more likely than not—that the value was indeed less than $86,100. If
anything, the Parkers’ refusal to accept that offer would suggest that $24,000 was
too low a value. What’s more, because the Parkers had the burden on this
essential element of special damages, Toney had no obligation to come forward
with alternative evidence proving a higher value.
Neither does Toney’s testimony that at one point Arthur Parker was “ready
to sell” the land and “want[ed] $1,000 an acre” get to the market value. Such
evidence merely shows that Arthur was thinking about selling the land and
ultimately did not do so. And the Parkers presented no other evidence of the land’s
market value, such as an appraisal or comparable sales.3
Without any evidence in the record of the market value, the Parkers failed
to prove that any slander of their title caused them harm. And so, they have failed
to establish the essential element of special damages. See Allen-Pieroni v.
Pieroni, 535 S.W.3d 887, 889 (Tex. 2017) (reversing trial court’s slander-of-title
judgment because “the record contain[ed] no evidence of the slandered property’s
market value”). We thus reverse the district court’s judgment finding that Toney
slandered the Parkers’ title and awarding $61,100 of special damages.
3 Given the many ways a party could prove market value, we find no merit in the
Parker’s argument that requiring such evidence creates an “impossible” burden.
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III. Punitive Damages
Toney also argues that the district court erred in awarding the Parkers
punitive damages on their slander-of-title and trespass claims. Because we find
that the Parkers failed to establish all the elements for their slander of title claim,
we cannot award punitive damages for that conduct. See Pringle Tax Serv., Inc v.
Knoblauch, 282 N.W.2d 151, 154 (Iowa 1979) (holding that punitive damages can
be awarded for an intentional tort without the court awarding actual damages, but
a harm must have occurred and been proven). But we must still consider whether
the punitive-damage award is supported by the unappealed trespass claim.
To be entitled to punitive damages for trespass, a plaintiff must show that
the trespass was “committed or continued with a willful or reckless disregard of
another’s rights” or was “intentional . . . without just cause or excuse.” White v.
Citizens Nat’l Bank of Boone, 262 N.W.2d 812, 817 (Iowa 1978). We agree with
the district court that the evidence justifies some award of punitive damages for
only the trespass claim—especially Toney’s conduct of willfully leaving posted an
Indian-burial-ground sign even after submitting an affidavit to the court that he
removed all the signs. But the court analyzed the award for the trespass claim and
the slander-of-title claim together and awarded a single amount of $62,101—equal
to the total amount of other damages awarded on the claims. We thus vacate the
punitive-damage award and remand to the district court to determine the
appropriate amount of punitive damages for only the trespass claim.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Schumacher, P.J., concurs; Buller, J., dissents.
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BULLER, Judge (dissenting).
In my view, the majority makes the mistake of conflating whether there was
evidence supporting an element with whether a party proved the element in the
way we as appellate judges might prefer. I also might have tried this case
differently and offered different evidence than the Parkers. But that is no basis for
reversal. I therefore dissent.
The disputed element in this slander-of-title case is “special damages.” The
majority correctly recites the law in noting that the typical method of proof is to
subtract the difference between the thwarted sale price and the salable value after
the slander when the property was again marketable. See Montgomery Props.
Corp. v. Econ. Forms Corp., 305 N.W.2d 470, 477 (Iowa 1981) (approving of
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 633 cmt. e (Am. L. Inst. 1977)). The majority
seemingly accepts there was adequate proof of the thwarted sale price, and I
agree. So the fight is over the sub-element concerning the salable value of the
land after the slander when it was again marketable.
As the fact-finder able to hear the evidence and see the witnesses first-
hand, the district court offered this analysis surrounding special damages:
The court concludes that the Parkers have suffered special
damages. They had a valid contract for the sale of the Y farm for
$86,100.00. This is significantly more than the 24 acres is worth as
pasture and represents a premium for the farm as hunting ground.
Toney put a value on the farm as pasture and timber when he offered
$1000 per acre for it. The court concludes that Parkers have been
damaged by Toney’s slander of title in the amount of $62,100.00.
(internal footnote omitted). As the basis for these findings, the court cited the
contract thwarted by the slander and the written offer from Toney to buy the land
after.
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The majority notes the “general rule” is “that an unaccepted offer for the
purchase of real property is not admissible as evidence of the market value of such
real property.” Hardaway v. City of Des Moines, 166 N.W.2d 578, 580 (Iowa 1969).
We don’t need to guess as to the purpose of this general rule because the supreme
court spelled it out:
It is, at most, a species of indirect evidence of the person making
such offer as to the value of the land. He may have so slight a
knowledge on the subject as to render his opinion of no value. Oral
and not binding offers are so easily made and refused in a mere
passing conversation, and under circumstances involving no
responsibility on either side, as to cast no light upon the question of
value, and they are unsatisfactory, easy of fabrication and even
dangerous. There is no opportunity to cross examine the person
making the offer to show his knowledge, intent or the basis of his
offer.
Id. at 580–81 (cleaned up). After carefully considering the basis for the general
rule, I would not apply it here, when the evidence as to market value came by
written offer from the slanderer and was used to determine the amount of special
damages.
Courts are somewhat divided on the admissibility of unaccepted offers to
purchase. See generally Vitauts M. Gulbis, Annotation, Unaccepted Offer for
Purchase of Real Property as Evidence of its Value, 25 A.L.R.4th 571 (1983).
Generally, jurisdictions that have admitted unaccepted offers require:
that the offer was made in good faith, by a person of sound business
judgment acquainted with the value of property in the area and
having the financial ability to purchase the property, that the offer
was for cash, and that it was made with respect to the market value
of the property and not a value derived from a private need or fancy
of the offeror. At least one jurisdiction has added the additional
requirement that the offer must be testified to by the offeror in order
to afford the adverse party an opportunity for cross-examination.
Other authorities, without particularly detailing the contents of the
foundational showing, have admitted evidence of unaccepted offers
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to purchase as some evidence of value where the bona fides of the
offer and the qualifications of the offeror were sufficiently presented
to permit the finder of fact to make an informed evaluation of the
offer.
Id. § 2[a] (internal citations omitted); see also City of Chicago v. Harrison-Halsted
Bldg. Corp., 143 N.E.2d 40, 45 (Ill. 1957). Only bona fide offers made by legitimate
potential buyers may be admissible because, in the absence of an actual sale, they
are the next best determination of value. See City of Chicago v. Lehmann, 104
N.E. 829, 831 (Ill. 1914) (awarding “great liberality” and “great freedom” to courts
in admitting evidence of “offers proved to be bona fide” to determine property
value). After the court determines that the offer is bona fide, “further questions
concerning the viability of the offer go to its weight and not to its admissibility.”
State ex rel. State Highway Comm’n v. Pfizer, Inc., 659 S.W.2d 537, 542 (Mo. Ct.
App. 1983). In short, other courts tend to “recognize[] an exception to the general
rule in exceptional cases . . . where the evidence establishes the foundation of a
bona fide offer so firmly and completely that the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in receiving the offer into evidence.” Lower Makefield Twp. v. Lands of
Dalgewicz, 4 A.3d 1114, 1120 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 2010) (collecting cases from
multiple jurisdictions).
The facts of this case fit nicely through the door our supreme court left open
in Hardaway because it is an “exceptional case[] in which the evidence establishes
a foundation for a bona fide offer so firmly and completely that the trial court would
not abuse its discretion in receiving evidence of such offer.” 166 N.W.2d at 581.
Toney’s offer valuing the property at $24,000 does not suffer from the concerns
the supreme court feared in Hardaway: he is not unfamiliar with the land or its use,
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the offer was not made in passing conversation, and he was fully available for
examination at trial. See Evans v. Sawtooth Partners, 723 P.2d 925, 928–29
(Idaho Ct. App. 1986) (upholding admission of evidence when the offeror testified
in person and was subject to cross-examination, there were no confrontation or
hearsay issues, and the offer was not speculative or ill-informed); Schymanski v.
Conventz, 674 P.2d 281, 286 (Alaska 1983) (noting that cross-examination of the
offeror bypassed the typical rationale for barring testimony of unaccepted offers to
purchase). If Toney thought $24,000 was not an accurate valuation, he certainly
could have testified accordingly—and he didn’t. The Parkers also didn’t refute his
valuation of the property at trial. And admitting this bona fide offer to the property
owner “on the question of value” is consistent with other supreme court precedent
going back more than a century. Faust v. Hosford, 93 N.W. 58, 61 (Iowa 1903).
As a practical matter, I fear the majority opinion rewards Toney for his
slander. I can understand why the Parkers thought the value Toney offered them
was a fair basis to calculate the delta between the thwarted sale price and the
market value they could obtain now. While perhaps it would have been better for
them to offer evidence in the vein of an appraisal or broker price opinion, the district
court heard testimony Arthur Parker wanted to sell for $1,000 an acre and the court
credited Toney’s offer letter for this amount as a bona fide attempt to purchase the
property. I discern no abuse of discretion in reaching that conclusion. See
Hardaway, 166 N.W.2d at 581. And on appellate review of this record, I decline to
join the majority in speculating as to the market value of the property or that “at
best the unaccepted offer would prove that the land value is at least $24,000,”
15
when the district court properly credited the best evidence presented at trial as to
value.
I dissent from reversing this matter to give Toney a third attempt to wriggle
out of fairly compensating the Parkers for him slandering their title.