Bice v. Siver

170 Iowa 255
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 13, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 Iowa 255 (Bice v. Siver) 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
Bice v. Siver, 170 Iowa 255 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

Plaintiffs owned 240 acres of land, and, on January 24, 1912, executed a lease thereof to the defendant from January 1, 1912, to March 1, 1913. By the terms of this lease, the tenant was to pay a rental of $960.00 and all [257]*257damages the lessor might sustain owing to any failure to perform its conditions. The lease required the defendant to haul out and spread on the land all the' manure thereon or which might accumulate during the term, and it is alleged in the petition that the defendant failed to do this, to plaintiffs’ damage in the sum of $75.00; that he misappropriated 1,334 feet of lumber of the value of $49.27; that he cut, moved and destroyed fences to replace which plaintiffs were put to an expense of $72.04; that he permitted to go to seed and spread Canada thistles on the land, to their damage in the sum of $50.00; and that he misappropriated four hinges, broke out window lights, carried away linoleum and removed a kettle, to their damage in the sum of $16.40. The answer pleaded a settlement, and in the counterclaim, defendant asked to be allowed $137.50 damages on breach of warranty in the sale of hay, and $20.00 owing to the refusal of plaintiffs to permit the defendant to plow in the fall on the place as agreed.

1. Compromise AND .SETTLEMENT : consideration : payment in advance : unliquidated claims.

2. Compromise AND SETTLEMENT : facts showing: evidence reviewed. I. The evidence disclosed that, but for the plea of settlement, plaintiffs were entitled to recover for failure to haul out the manure. On the other hand, if there was a sufficient showing of settlement to carry the issue to the jury, error in any other rulings must have been without prejudice. At the outset then, it is important to inquire into the sufficiency of the evidence bearing on this issue. One-half the rent was payable January 1, 1913, and the other half on March 1st following. In December previous, the defendant met plaintiff Isaac Bice -at Walker, and talked with him a couple of hours at the bank. “We talked,”- says de‘about the manure I hadn’t got out and about all the different things I thought he would make me trouble over; I told him I had trouble on the land, couldn’t get on to some sixty acres, and about the spoiled hay, that there were two or three feet of spoiled hay in the bam that I had to fendant Siver, [258]*258feed to my cattle. I called plaintiff’s attention to the hay when I found it was spoiled. I settled with him in Walker in December, 1912. I asked him to throw off two tons of hay, he wouldn’t do it; then I asked him to throw off one ton and he wouldn’t do it. He said if I would pay the rent he would be' satisfied. I paid him $12.00 per ton for the hay, I told him I hadn’t got the manure out, that I. wasn’t to go on to it in the fall and I didn’t think that he ought to compel me to haul out what he had stocked up for years. He didn’t say that he would do anything if I paid my notes, one of the rent notes was not. due until March 1st. I asked him if he would take all the money, and he said, ‘ all right, ’ and I told the banker to draw up a check for the full amount and deduct the interest, and then there was something said by me about some guide wires that I put up at the com crib.”

On cross-examination he testified that, when he paid the notes, he' paid them in full, less discount for the unexpired time on the last note maturing. “I wanted him to throw off $1.25 an acre for the land not plowed. He objected to it. There was something said about the manure. I told him how much I had hauled and how much I thought there was in there. I didn’t want to do anything about the manure then.”

The brother of the defendant testified as follows: “I was present when the defendant had a settlement with Mr. Bice at Walker on the 23rd of February, 1912. Was in the bank, my boy, myself and the defendant, and Mr. Hawkinson, the banker, was there. I talked some with Mr. Bice about the manure myself. He said he knew it was impossible to get that manure out in the fall the way the weather was. They had some talk about the hay. The defendant asked him to throw off on the hay and I heard him say that if he would throw off a ton or a couple of ton that it was going to be pretty hard to raise' the rent that he had to pay.' My brother spoke to him about the fall pasture and the condition of the [259]*259fences. After the defendant paid the rent, Bice said, ‘It is settled up.’ Q. What did he say after that? A. He said him and Lon was going to settle up and there would be no trouble. . . . Q. There wasn’t anything said about manure? A. I didn’t hear my brother say anything about manure that day.”

Hawkinson testified that he was the cashier of the bank and heard a part of the conversation. That he heard them talking about throwing off $1.00 an acre for the land not plowed, and some talk about hauling manure or failing to haul and other matters.

The appellant argues: first, that there was no consideration for any settlement; and second, that no agreement to settle the matters in dispute was made by the parties. The rent note was paid before maturity and, even though a discount was allowed, defendant was under no obligation to pay until it should become due. Of course, the discount was a consideration, but there may have been a consideration in addition to this, and if, as defendant contends, such additional consideration was the payment of the rent notes before maturity, then this would be ample to support the' satisfaction of the unliquidated claims held by plaintiffs against defendant. A more difficult question to be determined is whether the parties entered into an agreement of accord and satisfaction. If so, this must be inferred from the language employed rather than from express words having such-import. Undoubtedly they were discussing all matters now in controversy, but the most said from which an agreement could be inferred was by Bice, that he was satisfied. With what was he satisfied? The fair inference is that he was satisfied to allow the discount and receive the rent then instead of later. No offer of compromise had been made save by defendant, in attempting to procure an allowance of some of his claims, which Bice refused. There was no discussion • as to whether plaintiffs would waive their claim to damage's because of -the omission [260]*260to haul out the manure, or to the other items involved in this suit, and we are inclined to the opinion that there was not sufficient evidence to carry the issue to the jury.

3. CONTRACTS: non-permance: difficulty attending performance : excuse. II. All the items on which plaintiffs made claim were in dispute save that for failure to haul out manur.e. The evidence showed without controversy that the defendant had failed to haul out 200 loads of manure which lie had expressly agreed to haul and spread upon the premises. The circumstance that hauling it out in the fall was interfered with in some way, or that he may have gotten his wagon in the slough at one time did not excuse him from performing the conditions of the lease, and plaintiff was entitled to recover at least $75.00 because of the breach of .the contract in failing to haul out and spread the manure upon the land.

4. Auction and Auctioneers: warranty: no implied authority to make. III. Plaintiffs had been occupying the farm and, before' yielding possession to defendant, had an auction sale, at which the latter purchased 11 tons of hay at $12.50 per ton.

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Bluebook (online)
170 Iowa 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bice-v-siver-iowa-1915.