Goodrich v. Fogarty
This text of 106 N.W. 616 (Goodrich v. Fogarty) 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 defendant is a nurseryman or wholesale dealer in trees, vines, and shrubbery at Council Bluffs, Iowa, and as such employs agents and canvassers who ply their trade in the customary manner in various parts of the state. In the month of May, 1903, two of these agents canvassed a considerable portion of Hamilton county, making their headquarters in Webster City, from which place they radiated through the surrounding country, driving teams secured from local livery stables. While the' orders taken by them contained a printed provision that the stock should be delivered, charges prepaid, on board cars at Council Bluffs, the method of business seems to have been that the goods were shipped to the address of plaintiff or his agent, who went to Webster City, took possession of them and removed them to some convenient place of storage, where the various customers were notified to meet the agent and make settlement. Among the orders so taken was one signed by the plaintiff, calling for the delivery to her in the fall of 1903 of one thousand two hundred and ten grape roots and one hundred gooseberry roots at an aggregate price of $116.25, and twenty blackberry, thirty raspberry, and ten dewberry roots; these latter to be furnished without money and without price. Shortly after giving the order plaintiff for some reason came to the conclusion that she had been overreached in the deal, and wrote to the defendant, informing him that the writing obtained from her did not conform to the agreement and un[225]*225derstanding of the parties and that she. would not comply with it. The defendant made no .response to this notice, and in the following October undertook to deliver the goods. Plaintiff refused to receive them and instituted this action to reform the contract. It is her claim that the agreement made between her and the canvassing agent was to the effect that payment of the bill should be postponed until the grape vines were in bearing, and that payment should then be made in fruit from said vines at its market value.
The claim of the plaintiff that the writing does not reflect the agreement is well supported by the evidence, and, with the failure of the defendant and his agents to offer any other version of the negotiations leading up to the signing of the order, amply supports the decree in this respect. Indeed, no other conclusion can be reached from the record.
[227]*227
The decree appealed from will be modified by striking from the order or contract as reformed the requirement that defendant shall plant the vines and bushes upon the plaintiff’s land in Hamilton county, the plaintiff assisting ■ therein, but in all other respects such decree will be affirmed. The appellant will pay the costs of this court.— Modified and affirmed.
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106 N.W. 616, 130 Iowa 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodrich-v-fogarty-iowa-1906.