Eggers v. Paustian
This text of 184 Iowa 1250 (Eggers v. Paustian) 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
[1252]*1252The defendant pleaded, also, that the reservation above stated was included in the lease without his knowledge, and by reason of deception practiced upon him by the plaintiff; and he asked for a reformation of the lease by the striking out of such clause. In advance of the trial by 'jury, the reformation thus prayed by the defendant was decreed by the court. At the time of the trial to the jury,.the plaintiff stood before the court without the benefit of such reservation in the lease. The plaintiff denied the eviction, and averred that the defendant vacated the premises voluntarily. He further pleaded that, on the ninth day of October, 1915, on the occasion of his visiting the premises with a proposed purchaser, he and the defendant entered into an oral agreement, whereby the defendant agreed to surrender the lease and vacate the premises upon receiving from the plaintiff a written notice.
IT. The plaintiff offered in evidence a transcript of certain testimony given by the defendant at the trial of the equity issue in the same case. This evidence was rejected. This evidence tended clearly to show that the defendant’s efforts at renting another farm began long prior to December 24th, and that he was then acting under the purpose to vacate the premises at the close of his first year. It follows that such evidence tended to show that the surrender of the premises on February 28th was voluntary, and not as the result of a constructive eviction. The evidence ought to have been admitted.
If the rejected evidence which we have set forth had been received, the court could not have instructed the jury peremptorily that the written notice of December 24th constituted an eviction. Whether, upon the record as made, the instruction was strictly correct, we have no occasion now to consider. For the errors indicated, a new trial must be awarded, and the judgment below is, accordingly, — Reversed.
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184 Iowa 1250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggers-v-paustian-iowa-1918.