Arthur Elevator Co. v. Grove

236 N.W.2d 383, 1975 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1072
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1975
Docket57069
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 236 N.W.2d 383 (Arthur Elevator Co. v. Grove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur Elevator Co. v. Grove, 236 N.W.2d 383, 1975 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1072 (iowa 1975).

Opinion

MASON, Justice.

The trial judge stated he was not amused as to the way the record came in in this matter and described it as “the most bizarre lawsuit.” A review of the record compels the conclusion there is ample support for his observation. During a period of more than two years before trial various pleadings, amendments thereto and motions were both dictated into the record and asserted in writings filed. There were additional pleadings and motions filed during trial. The facts and amounts claimed are confused, partly due to the poor records kept on both sides. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff, Arthur Elevator Company, an Iowa corporation, was organized January 1, 1965. Its predecessor company of the same name was a partnership and had been in operation since 1943. Defendant Burly Grove is a farmer in Ida County.

Plaintiff commenced a law action seeking to recover the agreed charges for goods and merchandise sold and delivered to defendant which were alleged to be the actual and reasonable charges for such merchandise.

In an amended and substituted petition plaintiff demanded judgment for $2000.51 as the amount due. At this stage of the pleadings plaintiff had plead and was relying on an open continuous account as a theory for recovery. A bill of particulars marked exhibit B was attached and made a part of this petition. Plaintiff also prayed for an attachment alleging “defendant is about to dispose of his property with intent to defraud his creditors.” A writ of attachment was ordered to be issued upon filing a $5000 bond. At the dictation of plaintiff the sheriff levied upon “such cattle owned by Burly Grove and in his possession to bring the exact amount of $3383, nearly as practicable” under the writ. It appears both parties concede 55 head of defendant’s cattle were levied on.

Defendant filed motion for more specific statement requiring plaintiff to state in more specific details the itemization contained in exhibit B. The motion was sustained. Rather than seeking to comply with the court’s order sustaining defendant’s motion plaintiff again amended its petition. In a new division plaintiff alleged that on the 30th day of June 1967 an account was stated between plaintiff and defendant upon which a balance of $2000.51 was found due plaintiff from defendant. Judgment was demanded for this amount with interest and costs.

The day trial finally commenced defendant filed answer alleging inter alia the bill of particulars attached to plaintiff’s petition was not a correct itemized statement showing the activity on the alleged account and further alleged defendant had not received all credits due him in connection with this account. In a separate division defendant asserted a counterclaim seeking damages for wrongful attachment. In another division defendant alleged plaintiff had failed to give him credit for certain drafts issued to plaintiff and had likewise failed to credit him with the price of corn defendant had delivered to the elevator. In still another division of his answer defendant sought recovery for work performed by him in applying fertilizer on farms of the elevator’s customers under an oral contract fixing the rate of pay at $2.00 per acre.

Trial was to the court.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence defendant moved for a directed verdict on the following grounds: “(1) Under Division I of Plaintiff’s Petition this action is based on an open account. There is no proof in the record at this point of any entries or itemizations of any sums of money that *386 would equal the first entry, the same being $1,513.16. (2) Now, as to Division II, Counsel would move the Court to further direct a verdict because this is an account stated allegation; and I think to have an account stated you must have some admission that a sum certain is acknowledged due and owing between the parties. And in the record there is no sum certain determined or placed in the record. (3) And I want to strike all matter pertaining to service charges. There is no agreement that this could be applied to the account.”

The court overruled part (1) of the motion and sustained parts (2) and (3).

During presentation of defendant’s evidence he moved that the attachment be dissolved or dismissed. The motion was sustained.

As finally submitted to the court plaintiff’s action was based on an open account with a beginning balance of $1513.66 as of January 1965. Plaintiff corporation had acquired the assets of its predecessor including accounts receivable. Plaintiff contended that among these accounts was one owed by defendant and the beginning balance of the account sued on was the balance carried forward from defendant’s account with the partnership as of September 23, 1964.

The first debit shown in exhibit B was a service charge of $15.13. Other service charges were debited to defendant’s account: February 27 in the amount of $15.28; March 31, $15.44; and April 3, $15.99, making a total of $1575.10 due April 30, 1965.

The beginning balance plus the service charges mentioned gives rise to the controversy over the amount of plaintiff’s claim. The account was credited with two checks given by defendant to plaintiff, one June 8, 1965 in the amount of $700; the other June 29 in the sum of $875.10. The total of these checks was the exact amount of the April 30 balance shown by the account.

The trial court found plaintiff had failed to establish the pre-1965 balance relied on by plaintiff as one of the items included in the total amount for which recovery was demanded. The court refused to allow service charges in the sum of $359.40 for 1965, 1966 and 1967. Based on this calculation the trial court found the total debits on the 1965-67 account to be $5121. The court further found credits in the total amount of $5073.17 which included the June 8 and June 29 checks previously mentioned and determined plaintiff had proved an excess of debits over credits of $47.83.

The court found defendant had failed to sustain his burden of proof as to the various items for which he sought recovery in the separate divisions comprising his counterclaim with the exception of the claim based on the application of fertilizer on farms of plaintiff’s customers and that division based upon his claim for wrongful attachment.

The court allowed defendant $2107.15 for fertilizer application, actual damages for wrongful attachment in the sum of $10,-704.20 and exemplary damages in the sum of $3286.71 which resulted in a total judgment in favor of defendant of $16,050.13, after crediting the amount allowed on plaintiff’s open account.

The issues presented on this appeal stem from plaintiff’s assignments of error.

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Bluebook (online)
236 N.W.2d 383, 1975 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arthur-elevator-co-v-grove-iowa-1975.