Cotter v. Gilman
This text of 191 Iowa 795 (Cotter v. Gilman) 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
“We will pay you a commission of $5.00 an acre if you make the sale; but the papers themselves would have to show the net amount of $145 an acre.”
Cotter, who had dealt in lands for more than 20 years, would infer from this that Gilman was owner! Exactly the contrary. In another letter, bearing date September 30, 1918, in response to a suggestion by Cotter that he had heard that the land was priced at $125 an acre, Gilman replied that this price was made some time ago; but that, “if the deal could be made a cash one, net to me, I could still swing it at that price. ’ ’ The suggestion that he “could still swing” the deal plainly intimates that the land belonged to another. No suggestion of ownership appears in the final negotiations, save that the price was made by Gilman “net to us.” Added to all this is the fact that the records of the county recorder and the auditor showed [797]*797That the land was never in the name of Gilman and was in the ikme of one Goddard, and that for this reason Goddard was nm.de party to' the suit. According to Gilman, it now belongs to P. Goddard Oselin, Goddard having departed this life some time prior to the trial. Regardless, however, of who may be the true owner, this record leaves no doubt that plaintiff was without information warranting him, as an ordinarily prudent man, in believing Gilman, to be .the owner of the land. The court did not err in dismissing* the petition and relegating the parties, if so advised, to an action at law for damages. — Affirmed.
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191 Iowa 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotter-v-gilman-iowa-1920.