Blake v. Barrett
This text of 15 N.W. 845 (Blake v. Barrett) 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
— The evidence shows that the plaintiff entered into a written lease with Addie E. Barber for certain premises, for the term of one year, from, the first day of March, 1879, agreeing to pay for the rental one-third of all the crops raised, and that he raised on said premises over six thousand bushels of corn. On the 16th day of June, 1879, F. J. Bar[81]*81ber executed to tbe defendant a bill of sale for an undivided one-third interest in all the crops on the land described in the petition. The evidence tends to show that, at the time of the execution of the bill of sale, F. J. Barber was indebted to the defendant, and that, before the bill of sale was executed, the plaintiff told the defendant that he rented the farm of F. J. Barber, and advised him to get a bill of sale of one-third of the crop, and that the defendant obtained 1494 bushels of corn, which was hauled for him by the plaintiff. The evidence tends to show that the corn was undivided in the cribs on the farm, and that plaintiff hauled and sold a portion of it as his own, and hauled to the defendant the quantity above named, pursuant to the bill of sale.
This instruction is erroneous, and, we think, was prejudicial to the defendant. To establish the defense of an estoppel against the plaintiff, growing out of his representations as to the ownership of the corn,-it is not necessary to prove that the corn belonged to F. J. Barber. If the corn in fact belonged to F. J. Barber, there would be no necessity for invoking an estoppel, and in fact could be no estoppel. An estoppel arises only where a party has by his conduct placed himself in a position that he cannot be allowed to show the truth. Other errors discussed by the appellant, amongst which is the refusal to grant a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, need not be considered. The judgment is
Reversed.
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15 N.W. 845, 61 Iowa 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-barrett-iowa-1883.