Chicago Cottage Organ Co. v. Caldwell

63 N.W. 336, 94 Iowa 584
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 20, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 63 N.W. 336 (Chicago Cottage Organ Co. v. Caldwell) 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
Chicago Cottage Organ Co. v. Caldwell, 63 N.W. 336, 94 Iowa 584 (iowa 1895).

Opinion

Kinne, J.

I. The plaintiff brings its action upon the following contract: “Contract. Chicago Cottage Organ Company is not responsible for any yerbal or written contract or promise, other than written or printed on the face of this contract. July 29, 1894. For value received, I, the undersigned, residing in Malvern, county of Mills and state of Iowa, promise to pay to the order of the Chicago Cottage Organ Company four hundred and no hundredths dollars, at their office in Chicago, Illinois, as follows: One Packard organ, at one hundred dollars ($100.00), and balance of three hundred dollars ($300.00) in payments as follows: $75.00 December 15, and seventy-five dollars every three months, until said three hundred dollars ($300.00) is paid in full, with interest on each payment at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from the date hereof until fully paid, with exchange, and a reasonable attorney’s fee, if this note is placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. To secure the payment of the sums of money in the foregoing note contracted to be paid, together with interest, exchange, and attorney’s fees as therein provided, I, the undersigned, hereby mortgage to the Chicago Cottage Organ Company one piano •made by Schubert Piano Company, No. 8,989, style 18, [586]*586being the property sold by said Chicago Cottage Organ Company to me, in part payment for which the foregoing note is given. And it is agreed that in ease default is made in the payment of any installment of said note at the time and place therein mentioned, or if the undersigned shall sell or incumber or remove the property above described, or any part thereof, from said town or county above mentioned, without the written consent of the Chicago Cottage Organ Company, or whenever said Cottage Organ Company or assigns may so elect, the said Cottage Organ Company, or their agent or assigns, shall have the right to take possession of said property, wherever found, and proceed to sell the same at public sale as by statute in such cases provided, and apply the proceeds of said sale to the payment of the sums mentioned in the foregoing note then remaining unpaid, whether the same be due or not, together with the interest thereon, and all costs pertaining to the taking, keeping, advertising, .and selling of said property, and a reasonable attorney’s fee. And it is further agreed that in case said property does not sell for an amount sufficient to pay said several sums, with interest, costs, and attorney’s fee, as aforesaid, then the undersigned will pay the deficiency on demand. Miss Nettie Donner. [Seal.] 'Witnessed by J. W. Foulks. Bead the above before signing.” It is averred that defendant failed to perform said contract; that the note is due and unpaid; and that defendant failed to deliver the organ on demand. It is also averred that the said Nettie Donner has intermarried with one Caldwell. The defendant answered, admitting the signing of the contract, and that nothing had been paid thereon. She pleads that her signature to said contract, aud the contract itself, were obtained from her by fraud, deception, misrepresentation, duress, and other false devices; that she made a contract with [587]*587plaintiff’s agent whereby she was to receive a Schubert piano, No. 8,989, style 18, on trial, to be kept by her ana purchased provided she was satisfied with the same after trial. She avers that the agent pretended to put the terms of said oral agreement in writing in the note- and contract in suit, and represented to her that he had done so; that she did not read the contract and note-before signing it, and was not permitted to do so by plaintiff’s agent; that they wrote the false-contract in suit, and pretended to read it to her, and did read it to her as though she was receiving the piano on trial in accordancé with the real agreement; that she took the contract, and began to read it, when the agent took it out of her hand, told her he was in a hurry to catch a train, and could read it for her, and read it wrong.. She avers she knew one of the agents well, and -had full confidence in him, and signed the paper relying upon the truthfulness of the statements of plaintiff’s-agent; that she -was only eighteen years old, and without business experience; that she did not know the contents of the paper, and that the note' and contract was without consideration; that the piano- was never delivered to her. Plaintiff, in reply, denies all of the allegations of the answer. Av-ers that it was verbally agreed that the piano should be delivered at the home of defendant’s mother, where defendant resided; that the piano sold defendant had before that time been examined by her, and was the one which was sent to the home of defendant’s mother, and left in the house, and has been kept by defendant ever since; that, if the number does not agree with the number in the contract, it is due to a clerical error. At the conclusion of' defendant’s evidence plaintiff moved for a judgment in its favor, which motion was overruled. The jury found for defendant. The court overruled plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, and entered judgment on the verdict.

[588]*5881 [590]*5902 [588]*588II. It is contended that the verdict is against the evidence, the result of passion and prejudice, and contrary to the court’s charge, and that the court erred ■in overruling plaintiff’s motion to direct a verdict for it. This is an action upon a written contract, and the defense, in brief, is that it Avas obtained by fraud. We must say that, after a careful consideration of all of the evidence, we conclude that the defense pleaded was not established by the evidence. Defendant avers that the contract was procured by duress. There is not a particle of evidence to sustain this allegation. She avers that the contract as made was that she was to receive the piano, and to try it, and to purchase it if .she liked it; that it was a conditional purchase. True, she so testifies, but the evidence very satisfactorily shows that such was not the fact. She claims that the contract was obtained by fraud, deception, and misrepiresentation practiced upon her by plaintiff’s agents; that she did not know she was signing such a contract, and that the agents did not read the contents of the ■paper correctly. Touching the circumstances surrounding the signing of the contract, the defendant testified as follows: “I was near by when he was writing it. I was not looking over his shoulder when he was writing. I was right close by. ■Did not see what he was writing. I could have gone and seen what he was writing. I did not try. I had confidence in him. Question. He told you certain ■things were going in there, and you did not take any ■effort to find out, did you? Answer. No, sir. Question. You did not make any effort to read it, did you? Answer. No. sir. Question. This laid before you just as it does now, didn’t it? This instrument laid before ■you? Answer. Yes, sir. Question. You sat there ■for some moments? Answer. Yes, sir. I was not looking at him. I can read the English language. [589]*589I cam understand ordinary language, and this was in large print. Yes, sir. ‘For value received 1 promise to pay.’ Yes, sir. There was nothing to keep me from seeing it. I looked right down at it. I was about to sign it. When they laid the paper down before me they didn’t use any means to keep me ■from' reading it, nor did they before. They laid it down for me to sign, stepped back, and I sat down at the desk. I took his seat when he quit writing. I looked at it. I could have read it. I did not try to read it. I made no effort whatever to read it. I simply relied altogether on what they told me.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.W. 336, 94 Iowa 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-cottage-organ-co-v-caldwell-iowa-1895.