Hagen v. Barry

194 Iowa 1207
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 194 Iowa 1207 (Hagen v. Barry) 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
Hagen v. Barry, 194 Iowa 1207 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

Evans, J.

No question is raised on this appeal as to sufficiency of proof of the alleged fraud. For the purposes of the appeal, therefore, it must be deemed to be proved, and our statement of the ease will proceed upon this theory. Plaintiff Hagen inherited, some years ago, 240 acres of land, 160 acres of which constituted the farm upon which he lived. This is the farm, title to which was acquired by the defendant. Hagen was a man comparatively ignorant and inefficient. For many years, the defendant had purported to aid him and to advise him. He had loaned him money, and for many years had been his constant creditor. Starting with an indebtedness of $1,000, it had gradually increased to a mortgage for $20,000, with two years’ delinquent interest thereon. Hagen owed the further sum of $500 to a bank of which the defendant was a director, and owed other debts amounting' to about $1,700.

Under a claim by Barry that he had to do something'to straighten up all of Hagen’s debts-, in order to save both of them from ruin, Barry obtained the signature of Hagen and his wife to two papers, one of which was a blank form of land sale contract, and the other a blank form of warranty deed. These blanks were wholly unfilled, except that they contained the de-[1209]*1209scriptiou of the land. Neither grantor nor grantee nor consideration was stated in either. In this form, a notary took the acknowledgment of the plaintiff and his wife. Barry thereafter caused the blanks to be filled and completed as instruments whereby the contract was made to appear as a contract of sale by Hagen to Barry of the 160-aere farm for a consideration of $33,600, and whereby the other paper purported to .be a warranty deed pursuant to such contract. Upon discovery of the fraud, plaintiff sued for the value of the land, and alleged such value to be $275 an acre. In stating his claim for damages, the plaintiff allowed credit to the defendant for the amount of the indebtedness due to him from Hagen, and for the amount paid by .defendant in settlement of the bank suit, and for the further sum of about $1,700 paid by the defendant to plaintiff, to enable him to pay his other debts. Upon this computation, the plaintiff claimed a balance due of about $19,000. ¥e shall have no occasion to deal Avith the many details of the trial. The appeal as finally submitted is directed to one major proposition. At the close of the evidence, and before the cause was submitted to the jury, certain colloquy of counsel was had in open court, but in the absence of the jury. Such colloquy and proceedings pursuant thereto appear in the record as follows:

“After the completion of the testimony, and before the cause is submitted to the jury, the plaintiff informs the court that he is ready and willing to accept a cheek of $7,000, which they claim to have tendered heretofore, with the understanding that it is to be a credit upon the farmland without any waiver of plaintiff’s rights to recover damages in this cause in excess of the contract' consideration.

“Judge Nichols: The defendant at this time says to the court that he is willing to deliver the check to the plaintiff or his attorney, without any limitation as to the effect of the delivery, leaving it to the law to determine the effect, if any, of the acceptance of the check at this time; but the defendant is unwilling to join in any reservation of the plaintiff as to the effect of the acceptance of said cheek. The defendant is willing, and now offers to allow the plaintiff to take said check with exactly the same force and effect as though it had been accepted when offered on February 24, 1919, as shown by the evidence herein.

[1210]*1210“Mr. Tobin: If in the last statement made by counsel, that tbe tender so made is in full settlement of plaintiff’s damages, it is refused. If it is offered to apply on the account now claimed by plaintiff in this cause, it is accepted.

‘ ‘ Judge Nichols: The defendant, when the check in question was tendered, on or about February 24, 1919, tendered it in performance of that clause of the contract which required the defendant to pay to the plaintiff $7,000. It was tendered then without condition or limitation as to its effect, and the defendant is willing that the plaintiff accept said check at this time without condition or limitation placed thereon by the defendant, leaving to the law to determine the effects of the acceptance of the check,

“Mr. Tobin: Plaintiff accepts and receives the check. Since this check was accepted, plaintiff finds that there is written on there, ‘Last payment in full on farm on Hagen.’ I assume that defendant means thereby, on the contract price.

“Judge Nichols: Yes; it means, and is understood by the defendant to mean, that he was offering to pay the amount still due and unpaid according to the terms of the contract, and was not intended to mean that it was in full settlement of any claim that the plaintiff is now making, the defendant only claiming that, the check was a performance of the contract on his part then due.”

In explanation of the foregoing, it appears that, under the contract of sale formulated by the defendant, he was to make the final payment of $7,000 on March 1, 1919; whereas, the contract and deed bore date prior to that time, to wit, January 7, 1919. In purported performance of his contract, the defendant had tendered to the plaintiff such sum of $7,000, prior to the beginning of this suit. He kept his tender good; and when this suit was commenced, the defendant brought his tender into court. This was the subject-matter of the colloquy above set forth. After such colloquy was had, the defendant then requested the court to give to the jury the following Instruction 12:

“12. The plaintiff has this day accepted the check for $7,000 in evidence before you, and thereby has recognized the validity of the contract in evidence before you as Exhibit B. [1211]*1211The plaintiff lias in his petition expressly stated that the plaintiff has elected to have the defendant remain the owner of said deed and of said land. Having thus ratified said deed and contract, the plaintiff cannot recover any other or different sum than the consideration expressed in said deed and contract.”

The court refused the instruction. The one question now presented to us is, Did the court err in such refusal? On the measure of damages, the court instructed, in substance, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, if at all, the difference between the contract price specified in the papers and the fail-market value of the land. The argument for the appellant is that, inasmuch as the contract was executory in form .and un-executed in fact, the plaintiff could not, after discovery of the fraud, voluntarily perform the contract and yet claim damages for the fraud; that the acceptance of the $7,000 tendered by the defendant in performance of the contract was, in legal effect, a ratification of the contract according to its terms, and a waiver of the fraud and of damages predicated thereon.

It is broadly true that, where a contract is wholly executory and unperformed at the time of the discovery of the fraud, and where the injured party has a complete remedy by the refusal to perform, then refusal is his sole and adequate remedy. Because he has not performed and is not under obligation to perform, he is deemed not yet to have been damaged. He may not voluntarily perform for the purpose of accruing an action for damages. In such a case, his damage would be deemed self-inflicted.

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194 Iowa 1207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagen-v-barry-iowa-1922.