Benson v. Cowell
This text of 2 N.W. 1035 (Benson v. Cowell) 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.
Opinion
I. The facts of the case, as disclosed by the testimony, are as follows: Cromwell sold or traded to defendant Cowell certain lands. These lands, or part of them, were, by Cromwell or Cowell, traded to plaintiff. It is, in the view we take of the case, unimportant to determine whether plaintiff made the contract with the one or the other.
[138]*138The trade with the plaintiff was to this effect: He was to convey to Cowell certain other lands and receive $570 in cash, and a certain mortgage upon the lands traded by him was to be paid by Cowell. The title of the lands to be conveyed to him was to be good and free of incumbrances. The title of these lands was in Cromwell; plaintiff was to convey the lands traded by him to Cowell. Cowell arranged or traded with Cromwell for lands which plaintiff was to obtain in the trade. As a deed could not be at once executed and delivered, it was arranged by the parties that plaintiff was to execute the deed for the lands traded by him, which should be left with Beed to be delivered to Cowell, when a sufficient deed for the laud's plaintiff was to receive was executed and delivered, and Cowell was to pay him the $570. The deed was executed and deposited with Beed and the payment made to plaintiff. This was in November, 1875. In December following, the deed to plaintiff for the lands he was to obtain in the trade was executed and left with Beed, but no abstract of the title was furnished. It was discovered that certain incumbrances rested upon the land, and it was claimed that the title was subject to certain defects which plaintiff insisted should be removed. This was not done, though demanded by plaintiff. The title remaining in this condition in May, 1876, plaintiff deposited with Beed the $570 he had received and demanded the deed he had executed should be returned to him, and notified Cowell that the trade was at an end.
Plaintiff was entitled to rescind upon restoring Cowell to the condition he was in before the contract. This he did by paying the money he had received. But it is insisted that it was not done for the reason that Cowell in his trade with Cromwell, paid the latter more money than was paid to plaintiff’; to restore him to the condition he was in before the trade, it is claimed that he should be reimbursed for the amount paid to Cromwell. "We cannot concur in this conclusion. There were two trades in the case, one between Cowell and Cromwell whereby the last obtained the land traded to plaintiff. In this trade Cowell paid Cromwell the money which he claims he should receive. The other was between plaintiff and Cowell, or Cromwell, it matters not which, in which plaintiff agreed to exchange his lands on the terms mentioned. In this trade he received the $570. Before he could rescind he was bound to repay the sum. Tie had nothing to do with the trade between Cowell and Cromwell, and the testimony shows that he did not know its conditions and terms, at least he did not know how much money Cowell paid. The contract which plaintiff rescinded related to the sale or exchange of his lands. He had nothing to do Avith any contractor arrangement under which the party Avith whom he contracted acquired the land traded to him. lie Avas not bound to put Cowell in the same condition he Avas in before his trade Avith Cromwell.
The foregoing view of the case is based upon elementary [140]*140principles of law and leads us to the satisfactory conclusion that the'decree of the court below is correct. We find it unnecessary to refer to or examine the authorities referred to by counsel, as they are cited to support doctrines which, in the view we take of the case, need not be applied to it.
Other points in the case need not be discussed. Upon tbe grounds we have stated we think the decree of the Circuit Court ought-to be
Affirmed.
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2 N.W. 1035, 52 Iowa 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benson-v-cowell-iowa-1879.