First Savings Bank v. Edgar

199 N.W. 1011, 199 Iowa 1136
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 26, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 199 N.W. 1011 (First Savings Bank v. Edgar) 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
First Savings Bank v. Edgar, 199 N.W. 1011, 199 Iowa 1136 (iowa 1924).

Opinion

Vermilion, J. —

The plaintiff sues to recover on two promissory notes given by the defendant. It appears without dispute *1137 that, on October 17, 1918, the defendant entered into a written contract with the Daniel Hayes Company for the purchase of 40 acres of land in California, and executed his note to the company for the purchase price. On the following day, this note was purchased by the plaintiff bank; and thereafter the two notes in suit, payable to the bank, were executed by the defendant, in lieu of the note originally given. The contract for the purchase of the land provided that, if, upon inspecting the property purchased within 90 days, the defendant was not satisfied with the tract, he had an option to select any unsold lot of equal acreage and price controlled by the company, or might, within seven days after completing the inspection, notify the company in writing, at its office in Chicago, that he was not satisfied with his purchase, and desired to have his money back;, and the company would, within 90 days, return to him all money or notes paid. Within the time allowed him by the contract, the defendant went to California and inspected the land described in his contract. He was not satisfied with it, and was shown another tract. He objected to this tract also. He saw rock upon it, and inquired about hard pan, and testified that he was told by agents of the company that the rock did not hurt the land, and that there was no hard pan upon it. He was still not satisfied with the tract, and, as to what then transpired, he pleads that one Lalor, the agent who had sold him the original tract, falsely represented that he personally was worth a quarter of a million dollars, and- that, if defendant would agree to a change in the Original contract of purchase by the substitution of the description of the last tract shown him, Lalor would guarantee in writing to sell the same for $200 per acre and interest, if the defendant became dissatisfied with it. The contract in fact entered into between defendant and Lalor at that time is as follows:

‘ ‘ Chowchilla, California,

“It is agreed by Mr. W. J. Edgar and S. P. Lalor that at the end of the one year if Mr. W. J. Edgar is not satisfied with the land purchased by him in the Chowchilla District that S. P. Lalor agrees to buy said forty acres for the sum of $200.00 per acre plus 6 per cent, and said Lalor agrees upon the pur *1138 chase of said land to pay said Edgar the money invested by Edgar in the improvement of the land plus fa per cent interest should Edgar be willing to sell at that time.

“ [Signed] W. J. Edgar.

“S. P. Labor,

. “Gerald Hayes.”

The original contract of purchase was then changed by substituting the description of the latter tract for that originally described therein.

The plaintiff claims to have been a. holder of the original note in due course, and claims further, among other things, that, by accepting the tract of land the description of which was inserted in the contract in lieu of that originally purchased, with knowledge of the fraud practiced upon him in the original sale, and entering into the contract with Lalor, defendant waived any defense he had against the notes in suit. The defendant denies that plaintiff was a holder in due course of the original note; alleges that he was induced to purchase the land originally described in the contract and to give the original note by false and fraudulent representations on the part of agents of the company as to the character and productiveness of the land and the financial responsibility of the Daniel Hayes Company and its operations, and executed the notes in suit upon the assurance of the cashier of the plaintiff bank that to do so would not affect his rights; and alleges that his acceptance of the contract describing the substituted land was procured by fraudulent representations as to its quality, to the effect that it was equal to the best tracts defendant had been shown which were under cultivation, and that there was no hard pan in that- part of California, and by a fraudulent concealment of the fact that there was hard pan underlying the' tract in question.

Various other issues were raised by the pleadings, but it is unnecessary to set them out. The case has been once before in this court, and a judgment for the defendant was then reversed. 193 Iowa 1150. Upon a retrial there was again a verdict and judgment for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals. Many errors are assigned that We do not find it necessary to consider, in the view we take of the case.

By a motion for a directed verdict in favor of the plaintiff, *1139 made at the close of all the evidence, and a motion for judgment in favor of plaintiff notwithstanding the verdict, the question is presented that, by accepting the contract of purchase as changed, and the contract of Lalor to purchase the land at the end of a year, if defendant was dissatisfied with it, with full knowledge of the fraud that had been practiced upon him in the original sale, the defendant waived any defense he might have had on that account against the notes sued on.

The ultimate question upon the trial, the one upon which the defense of fraud in the inception of the original note finally depended, was one of waiver. Upon this question the jury was instructed that, if the contract with Lalor was entered into before the original contract of purchase containing the description of the substituted land was approved by the defendant, and was the sole inducement for the defendant’s acceptance of the contract describing the substituted land, then the defendant could not assert the defense of fraud against either the original note or the notes in suit. The correctness of the rule of law so announced is not questioned. The defendant relies upon the proposition that a waiver of previous frauds cannot be predicated on acts induced by other and later frauds. This was the view taken by the trial court and the rule given to the jury. This being conceded to be correct, the question arises whether there is any evidence to support a finding that the defendant relied upon alleged fraudulent representations as to the character of the land substituted for that originally described in the contract of purchase, in accepting that contract as changed. This must be determined from the testimony of the defendant himself and the circumstances established by the uncontroverted evidence.

It is undisputed that, before he accepted the contract for the second tract, the defendant knew that his note had been negotiated to the bank before he had had an opportunity to inspect the land, and in violation of the agreement of Lalor, made at the time it was taken, that it and the contract would be left at the bank for safe-keeping until the inspection had been made. He had given the notes in suit direct to the bank, in place of the note so negotiated. He knew that the land he had contracted for had been misrepresented to him, and he had refused to take it. He had learned that the representations as *1140 to the farming operations of the Daniel Hayes Company were not true.

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Bluebook (online)
199 N.W. 1011, 199 Iowa 1136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-savings-bank-v-edgar-iowa-1924.