Council Bluffs Iron Works v. Cuppey

41 Iowa 104
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 21, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 Iowa 104 (Council Bluffs Iron Works v. Cuppey) 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
Council Bluffs Iron Works v. Cuppey, 41 Iowa 104 (iowa 1875).

Opinions

Day, J. —

1 materiality, I. As the defendant’s appeal involves the right of plaintiff to recover anything upon the instruments in suit, we consider it first. The evidence shows that C. py piendrie was at the time of the transactions involved, and now is, president of the Council Bluffs Iron Works. The plaintiff introduced as a witness one Overton, who testified as follows:

“ In 1869 I was dealing in ties, and Mr. Hendrie asked me if I could sell some ties for him, I told him I had a contract for getting out ties for the O. & S. W. E. E., and that I could put in his ties on my contract. He told me they were at Avoca, and were in two lots. I made sale of them to the O.
[106]*106& S. W. R. R., and sent the inspector of the company, Mr. W. W. Taylor, over to inspect the ties.”

This evidence was objected to as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial.

The witness also further testified: “I don’t remember whether I went out myself before the 4th of January, or not. On the 4th of January, I see from my memorandum, I was there. I was there again on the lltli of January, and staid all night with Mr. Cuppy, and he came in here with me next day. When I was there on the 4th of January, I asked him why he would not give the ties up, and he said his lawyer told him not to. That was the way the conversation came up. On the 11th I told him I must have ties to put in on my contract with the O. & S. W. R. R., and asked him where I could buy ties. He told me I could buy ties of other parties cheaper than I could of him. The 4th of January is the first I have any account in my memorandum of being there. I think I was there before that, but I don’t know when it was. I sent Mr. Taylor, the O. & S. W. inspector, to see him before I went at all. He went there for the purpose of inspecting and receiving the ties for the O. & S. W. R. R., which I bought of Hendrie, but he did not get them.”

This testimony was objected to as incompetent. The defendant claims- that all this testimony is hearsay. We think it was properly admitted. The first part of it is merely historical or introductory, showing the circumstances under which the witness had an interview with defendant. The latter part .tends to show, from defendant’s admissions, that he was not willing to deliver the ties, and thus to contradict his testimony and rebut the defense upon which he relies.

2. conté act: precedent. II. The mortgage stipulates that it shall be void upon condition that the defendant deliver to Smithers and Morris, on board the cars of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway, to be furnished by Smithers and Morris, at Avoca, 1105 railroad ties in the month of December,- as per the terms of the note sued on, and 1105 ties on or before the 12th day of January, 1870. ' Defendant claims that the having of the cars at Avoca, to receive the ties, is a con[107]*107dition precedent to the delivery, and that, as there is no proof that these cars were furnished, defendant is discharged from his liability upon the notes, or, at most, can only be required to furnish the ties. Upon the trial the defendant testified as follows:

“ My mill is located near the railroad, only a few rods from it, and about a mile and a-half east of the depot,at Avoca. I piled a lot of the ties up there. Some I piled at my house and some of them I hauled to Avoca. That is what I did on my part toward filling the contract. I sawed out the ties and placed them near the road, ready for delivery. I got ties ready for delivery sufficient to fill my contract. I have still a sufficient number on hand to fill my contract. I could have begun the delivery of them on the fii’st day, if cars had been furnished me. There were ties enough yesterday to fill the contract, and I guess they are there yet.”

Defendant does not attempt to state the number of ties delivered at Avoca, and as to the balance there is no pretext that anything was done as to thé delivery, except that they were sawed and could have been delivered. The defendant has not shown such performance on his part as will exonerate him from a payment of the notes in money.

The instruments sued on fix both the time and place of their discharge in property. That the plaintiff should have had cars at the time and place of delivery to receive the ties is no more a condition precedent, than that the payee of an instrument to be discharged in property should be at the time and place of delivery ready to receive the property tendered. In neither case can a full and complete delivery be made without the concurrence of the payees. In neither case does the failure of the payee discharge the maker from doing all that he can do, without the concurrence of the other party. The defendant might have hauled the ties to Avoca, and, if no cars had been there to receive them, he might have piled them near the railroad track, at the usual place of receiving such property, and set them apart for the plaintiff. If he had done this, the property in the ties would have passed to plaintiff, and the note would have been discharged. Games v. Man[108]*108ning, 2 G. Greene, 251; Hambel v. Tower, 14 Iowa, 530; Barnes v. Graham, 4 Cowen, 452; Lamb v. Lathrop & Collins, 13 Wend., 95. Rut defendant has shown no effort at delivery, no offer to deliver; not even a notice to plaintiff that he was ready to deliver.

The only one of the numerous cases cited by defendant which seems-to sustain his opinion, is that of Goodwin v. Holbrook, 4 Wendell, 377. In that case a sum of money was to bo paid in salt, the party contracting to make payment, agreeing to pack the salt in barrels in the usual way of packing salt, the contract specifying that the barrels were to be furnished and delivered at the place of manufacture by the party to whom the payment was to be made. It was held that in an action for the non-delivery of the salt it was necessary for plaintiff to aver that he had furnished the barrels. That case falls under a principle different from the one at bar. In that case the first step toward the delivery was the packing of the salt in barrels at the place of manufacture. Until the barrels were furnished, that step could not be taken. In this case the ties could have been hauled to Avoca without the furnishing of cars to receive them, and that should have been done.

3 promissory defalcation0'1* negotiaMity. III. Plaintiff claims that the court erred in admitting evidence of the failure of consideration in part of these instrumen^sj an(3 reducing 'the amount of recovery because of such failure. The instruments in ques-were transferred before maturity, by written assignment. Section 2084 of Code of 1873, 1795 of Revision of 1860, provides that all instruments in writing, by which the maker promises to pay to another a sum of money in property or labor, are assignable by indorsement thereon or by other writing and the assignee shall have a right of action in his own name, subject to any defense or counter claim which the maker or debtor had against any assignor thereof, before notice of his assignment.

Section 2085 of the Code of 1873,1797 Revision of 1860, is as follows: “ Instruments by which the maker promises to pay a sum of money in property or labor, or to pay or deliver property or labor, or acknowledges property or labor, or money to [109]

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41 Iowa 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/council-bluffs-iron-works-v-cuppey-iowa-1875.