Fairmont Creamery Co. v. Darger
This text of 178 Iowa 732 (Fairmont Creamery Co. v. Darger) 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
The plaintiff is a corporation of Nebraska, with its principal place of business in the city of Omaha, and [733]*733engaged generally in the creamery business in Iowa, as well as elsewhere. It was indicted December 7, 1912, for unfair discrimination, in that, as was alleged, it had paid more for cream or butter fat in one locality than in another, in the absence of differences in grade or quality or cost of transportation- — -not to meet competition, but to crush a competitor. On trial, the court, on motion of the State, directed an acquittal, and in this action damages are claimed, for that, as is alleged, the prosecution was malicious and without probable cause. Issues were joined, and, after a jury was impaneled, evidence in behalf of plaintiff was introduced, tending to sustain the allegations of the petition. When plaintiff rested, defendants moved that a verdict be directed, on the ground tha,t a corporation cannot maintain an action for malicious prosecution, for that its property cannot be seized nor its person arrested, and this is neither alleged nor proven, and the damages are only those incident to all litigation. This motion was overruled, and defendants examined one witness concerning plaintiff’s reputation for honest and fair dealing, when a juror was taken ill, and the trial discontinued. Defendants then renewed the above motion, which was overruled, and later moved for judgment on the pleadings, on the grounds that: (1) The action is for personal injury, and a corporation cannot maintain such an action; (2) no interference with person or property is alleged; and (3) the wrong, if any, is only such as suffered in civil actions. This motion was overruled. The defendants thereupon appealed. The plaintiff moves that the appeal be dismissed, on the grounds that neither of the orders entered is appeal-able, and defendants did not elect to stand on the ruling, and no final order or judgment was entered.
[734]*734
, Counsel might have withdrawn the answer, having obtained leave, and then have interposed the demurrer; but our system of pleading does not allow a party to answer on the merits and demur to the petition at the same time. Nor does it permit a demurrer to the issues, as was undertaken in this ease. For these reasons, the motion may not be construed as in the nature of demurrer, and the order was not appealable.'
III. There is another reasofi for sustaining the motion: i. e.,no final ruling was entered. Every right of each party continues as before such order was entered, and no obstacle
to the disposition of the ease on its merits was interposed. That an appeal may only be taken after a final order is entered, appears in the following decisions: Roddy v. Gazette Co., 163 Iowa 416; Thorpe v. Smith, 86 Iowa 410; Quinn v. Capital Ins. Co., 82 Iowa 550; Seippel v. Blake, 80 Iowa 142.
The motion to dismiss the appeal is — Sustained.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
178 Iowa 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairmont-creamery-co-v-darger-iowa-1916.