Boyle v. Geling

218 N.W. 506, 206 Iowa 1208
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 13, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 218 N.W. 506 (Boyle v. Geling) 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
Boyle v. Geling, 218 N.W. 506, 206 Iowa 1208 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Morling, j.

The defense is that defendant is of inferior mentality, and was induced by false representations to" sign the contract sued on, and to pay the $700 which she did pay thereon. The plaintiff (a widow) is in the insurance business, has lived in Ossian 34 years, and is familiar with town properties and their *1209 value. 'Defendant -lived on a farm until about six years before the trial. During such six years, she was living- in Ossian with her mother. Her work in town -was cleaning a doctor’s office, which occupied an hour each morning, and then she worked out by the day for-her sisters. She had saved up $1,400, and had it in the bank in--Ossian. Defendant’s testimony, in substance, is that plaintiff called her into plaintiff’s place from the street; that plaintiff told her she had a place to sell for $1,600, could rent it for $10 a month, worth $1,400, could sell it to. someone else for $1,600; that, the second time plaintiff saw her, she told-defendant “I ought to swipe mother’s key away from mother’s box, and rent a box for myself * * * I had notes in my mother’s box, * * * $1,400.- I told Mrs. Boyle I had bank notes in .that box. * * She told- me I ought to ask my brother for- money to .pur in the box. * * * I didn’t tell Mrs. Boyle that this note was in the box,—no, I didn’t. She told me I ought to keep still until after it was over, about this deal; then they could find out themselves—not to say anything to my folks. * * * She said that property could be sold to Mrs. Kipp for $900, and could sell to Mrs. Berckmeyer for $1,600, and to'Mike-Kline said he wants it-for same price. * * * only ¡went to school three ór four years. ’ ’ She says she -has been sickly all her life,' and has not done any business for herself ; that she went through all four rooms, looked the house over, inside and out; that plaintiff told her she ought to rent it out.

‘ ‘ Q. And you told her you would probably live there sometime yourself? A. Not right away yet. * * * Q. You told Mrs. Boyle you wanted to have a home for yourself after a while? A. She coaxed me into it. So long as mother was .going..to live; I wanted to live here.”

She says that she didn’t hav.e any money to- repair, after she paid the $1,400.

“I ask my brother for the key to the box in which this money was. I didn’t tell him what I wanted it for. Mrs. Boyle [plaintiff] forbid me to tell. Mrs. Boyle said about, getting away from my mother, I ought to hire a car and take my. stuff over there in the evening to the house. ”

•This is ail denied by the plaintiff, who says she has-known defendant for 30 years.

*1210 “First time Mary [defendant] came to me to talk about buying the property was November, 1925. I didn’t call her. * * * Never told her not to.tell anybody. She said she would tell her mother nothing ;■ that she was 37. * * * She told me she was making curtains, and told me her mother asked her what she was doing, and she answered,. ‘None of your business.’ I said I wouldn’t dare talk to my mother like that.”
“Q.. You told Mary Geling at that time that it was worth $1;600, didn’t you? A. No, I don’t know as I did tell her anything of the kind. * * * I told her I held.it for $1,600.at one time. * * •* I said that. she would have to get it plastered, paihted, and wired, and she could rent it for $10 per month. I said I got $9 for it when it wasn’t, and I knew she could get $10. * * * The last offer I had was $1,000. The highest cash offer was $1,250. I sold it once, that the party took, me up on $1,400, but he wanted it on the installment plan; but he backed out.”

This she says was Henry Miller, who is dead. Plaintiff says:

“Had a talk-with a man that plastered the place, Walter Milbert. I went with Mary Geling to Mr. .Milbert. She asked me to-ask what it would cost to plaster. He said it would cost less than $40 to move the chimney where Mary wanted it, and to plaster the house. I had a talk with the electric light man. She said if she got the place, she wanted to wire it. ’ ’

Plaintiff also says that she didn’t know that defendant had a dollar to her name, until defendant said she was going to buy a place. She says that defendant asked her to go to the Figge bank, where defendant did her business.

“I think it was Mary who suggested going to the bank * * * When we talked about this contract, • and she spoke about Mr. Figge, making it out, he said, ‘I will get Mr. Allen. He is used to this Work.’ I said, ‘It makes no difference to me.’ ”

Plaintiff says she thinks the property is worth from $1,500 to $1,600.

Plaintiff says that defendant “had two checks, one for $730 and one for $760. She [defendant] said the $90 would plaster the house.” She says that she (plaintiff) wrote a check “for Mary Geling,” and the banker handed her $30, and she handed *1211 defendant $30; that she (plaintiff) wrote the “for” in the check, .“because if I wrote it ‘for Mary Geling,’ I would give it to her, and I can remember what it is for. * * * Q. Wouldn’t it be well for her to indorse it? A. Well, if I wrote ‘Mary Geling,’ but I wrote, ‘for Mary Geling.’ ”

Defendant’s sister testifies:

“The house,—the plaster is off, some laths are off, the floor is sunken, some windows are broken. The roof seemed to be sagged, and the porches are rotten. No cellar under the premises; no well. The boards on the walk or platform around the house, broken up and rotten. * *• * My sister Mary went to school from 9 to 13. She told me the teacher carried hér out, time and time again, when she fainted away. She isn’t as strong as she ought to be. I don’t know of her doing any business for herself. ”

That the house was badly out of repair, and was more than 40 years old, is undisputed, and these details by the sister are not denied. The lot is a corner lot, with cement sidewalks on two sides, but is low. The opinions on value range from $250 to $1,500. A- witness says, and plaintiff denies, that plaintiff offered the place to her for $900, six years before the trial. Two of plaintiff’s witnesses put the value at $1,200; another, from $1,200 to $1,500. Another of plaintiff’s witnesses values the. lot at $800 to $1,000, and .the property $1,200 or $1,400, which would leave $400 for the. house, or , the improvements. The house had last been, rented to a pauper at $8.00 per month. .It was vacant at the time of the sale. Plaintiff appears to have paid $1,250 for the property. When, or in what condition the property then was, does not appear.

Inadmissible opinions that defendant is not capable of doing business appear in the record. Plaintiff testifies:

“The first time Mary Geling came'to my house, she talked about her engagement to Pat Fitzpatrick; told me about what she was going to get ready to get married.” ‘

Defendant was asked, on cross-examination

“Who was it you were engaged to be married to? Á. Who spoiled it for me is ivhat I would like to’know. It was somebody.

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Related

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233 N.W. 21 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
218 N.W. 506, 206 Iowa 1208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-geling-iowa-1928.