Black v. De Camp

43 N.W. 625, 78 Iowa 718, 1889 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 454
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 29, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 N.W. 625 (Black v. De Camp) 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
Black v. De Camp, 43 N.W. 625, 78 Iowa 718, 1889 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 454 (iowa 1889).

Opinion

Granger, J.

This court has, to some extent, construed' the contracts involved in the issues on this trial on a former appeal. The opinion is to be found in 75 Iowa, 105. On the sixth day of January, 1886, the plaintiff entered into a contract with J. W. Blackwood and E. De Camp, as follows:

[720]*720“Ma-rshalltown, Iowa, Jan. 6, 1886.

“This contract and agreement, entered into this day between John W. Blackwood and E. De Camp, of the first part, and John S. Black of the second part, is to certify that the party of the first part, in consideration of two thousand dollars ($2,000) paid by the party of the second part, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, agrees to deliver to the party of the second part fifty (50) head of Texas ponies, thirty (30) head to be mares and twenty (20) to be geldings, to be from three (3) to six (6) years old, and from thirteen (13) to fifteen (15) hands high, and sound and smooth. Colors to be black, bay, roan and gray, and said horses to be in good, healthy condition when delivered here. And said party of the first part agrees to dejjosit two thousand dollars ($2,000) in notes as collateral security.

“ J. W. Blackwood & E. DeCamp,

“John S. Black.”

On the same day a note was executed to plaintiff, as follows :

“$2,000. Marshalltown, Iowa, Jan. 6, 1886.

“On or before July 15 after date, for value received, we promise to pay to the order of John S. Black, at Marshalltown, Iowa, two thousand dollars ($2,000), with interest from date until paid at the rate of ten (10) per cent, per annum after due, payable annually, and a reasonable attornéy’s fee if suit be instituted on this note. It is hereby understood and agreed that this note shall become null and. void upon the delivery of fifty (50) head of Texas ponies, as per contract bearing even date herewith, to John S. Black; it being understood that this note is given as collateral security for the faithful discharge of said'contract.

“ J. W. Blackwood & De Camp,

“M. De Camp.”

On the twenty-third of the same month another contract and note, of like import, were executed between the same parties, except that the contract was for the delivery of twenty-five ponies for the consideration of one thousand dollars, and the collateral note [721]*721was for one thousand dollars instead of two thousand dollars. The ponies thus contracted for were by the plaintiff sold to three different parties, — thirty to one, twenty-five to another and twenty to the other. To one of the purchasers, N. W. Wood, was given an order as follows:

“January 12, 1886

“John W. Blackwood & E. De Damp:- — Please deliver to N. W. Wood, or order, • thirty (30) head of sound Texas ponies on or before July 15,1886, seventeen (17) head to be mares and thirteen (13) head to be horses, all to be from three (3) to six (6) years old, and from thirteen (13) to fifteen (15) hands high, and charge the same to our contract of January 6, 1886. I also agree that, on failure of delivery of any or all the price to be paid, the deficiency shall be thirty-five ($35) per head.

J. W. Blackwood and E. Be Camp each endorsed the order by writing his name across the face. A like-order was given to each of the other purchasers. There-was a failure to deliver the ponies, and the plaintiff, having paid to his vendees thirty-five dollars each for the ponies to be delivered, brings this action on the collateral notes above referred to.

The defense urges that the acceptance of the orders for the delivery of the ponies to the -purchasers from the plaintiff was a satisfaction of the plaintiff ’ s claim as against defendants, and their release as to him. In the former appeal the orders for delivery were not in the case, but the contract of sale and the collateral notes were, and the two were held to be parts of the same contract; that the collateral note was in the nature of an indemnity, on which M. Be Camp was a surety, he not being a party to the original contract.

' novation;' w a 1 ’ I. We first notice the point as to the legal effect of the acceptance or endorsement by Blackwood and Be Camp of the order. Appellants, in argugument, place much stress upon the fact that the orders accepted provide for the [722]*722payment of thirty-five dollars each for the ponies on failure of delivery, and it is their construction that by the acceptance of the orders they assumed such payment, which worked a change in the contract, and operated to discharge the first contract. We are not referred to an authority, nor do we know of one, that would sanction the construction urged. It is true, the contract of sale did not fix a price to be paid for a failure of delivery, but it, in legal effect, did provide for a payment of the value of the property, and the new contract does no more, except that it fixes the value instead of leaving it for after determination. The unmistakable facts are that plaintiff bought the ponies of Blackwood and De Camp, to be delivered, and then sold them to other parties for future delivery, and gave a direction or order to his vendors to make the deliveries to his vendees, and agreed that if his vendors failed to make the delivery he would pay thirty-five dollars for each pony not delivered, and, accepting plaintiff’s instruction, plaintiff’s vendors agreed to pay such price if they failed in delivering. The accepted order also provided that the deliveries or payments by Blackwood and De Camp should be applied to the discharge of their obligation to the plaintiff. The accepted order is susceptible of no. other construction. Its language is to deliver the ponies, etc., and charge the same to our contract of January 6, 1886. Such language is entirely inconsistent with the idea of supplanting the former contract. It is a plain acknowledgment of its continued existence. For as many ponies as were delivered, or payments therefor made, the defendants were entitled to charge the same to plaintiff and receive credit on their credit with him. Neither the accepted order nor the testimony in the case tends to show that there was a thought that plaintiff was not, after the acceptance of the order, liable for any default of the acceptors. The contrary is clearly apparent. The contract has not the essential requisites of a contract of novation. The claim of appellant has no support in the cases of Foster v. Paine, 63 Iowa, 85, or Lester v. [723]*723Bowman, 39 Iowa, 611. It' is urged that under the contract, by virtue of the accepted order, the defendants xnig’ht have been subjected to three separate suits for its performance, and hence that it is a different contract. It is true that in some respects the order and acceptance made the contract different, but the fact of such difference would not cancel their obligation to the plaintiff. In this respect we are speaking of the obligations of Blackwood and E. Be Camp.

g _. assign_ E'gVof' surety. II. M. Be Camp was a surety on the collateral notes, and it is urged especially in his behalf that the change in the contract was such as to release him from liability. In this respect the question is one of greater doubt. We are now to inquire if any material change of the contract was made by the order.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McKinley v. Small
160 N.W. 652 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1916)
Twin City Creamery Co. v. Godfrey
142 N.W. 362 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1913)
Lowe v. Blum
1896 OK 21 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 N.W. 625, 78 Iowa 718, 1889 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-v-de-camp-iowa-1889.