Galpin v. Wilson
This text of 40 Iowa 90 (Galpin v. Wilson) 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
I. The evidence shows that the defendant, Kelso, was about seventy-four years old when the note in controversy was given, but as to the extent of his imbecility and incapacity for business, as well as in respect to the representations made to him to induce him to sign the note, the evidence is conflicting. If the jury gave full credit to the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses upon these points, their verdict was not-unreasonable: It is very probable that the want of capacity to contract was not so clearly shown as to justify the jury in finding the contract void on that account alone; but the imbecility — the mental and bodily weakness, — taken in connection with the representations made at, and the circumstances attending the execution of the note, afford a sufficient-basis for the verdict, and we cannot set it aside as being contrary to the evidence.
II. The plaintiff asked a series of instructions, all of which were refused. The court also gave a series of instructions, to
. The objections made by counsel to the second instruction given, upon the subject of the defendant’s mental weakness, and his want of capacity to reason, are critical l-ather than substantial. The instruction is too long to insert in this ' opinion, but we have carefully examined it in the light of the very astute and able argument by appellant’s counsel, and are constrained to say that we find no substantial error in it.
III. The third and fourth instructions are also objected to on the grounds that there was no evidence upon which to rest
AFFIRMED.
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40 Iowa 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galpin-v-wilson-iowa-1874.