Halstead v. Rohret

235 N.W. 293, 212 Iowa 837
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 10, 1931
DocketNo. 40234.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 235 N.W. 293 (Halstead v. Rohret) 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
Halstead v. Rohret, 235 N.W. 293, 212 Iowa 837 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The decedent died on January 22, 1927. The plaintiff’s claim was filed in July, 1927. Trial was had on June 5 and 6, 1929. The decedent was a bachelor, who lived upon his own farm near Iowa City. For many years next prior to 1921 the plaintiff and her husband had been tenants upon this farm and the decedent had lived with them thereon. The farm consisted of 219 acres and contained but little tillable ground. In 1921 the plaintiff and her husband ceased to occupy the farm *839 as tenants, but continued to live in the home with the decedent. Out of this relation arose the services, which formed the basis of the plaintiff’s action. The plaintiff filed her petition in two counts. In the first count she alleged that continuously from the year 1911 until the date of his death, the decedent at his request lived in her family and that she cared for him during all that period of time; that during much of that time he was an invalid and needed nursing and received the same from the plaintiff. In such count she alleged the reasonable value of her service. In her second count she pleaded a contract for her services; that the immediate occasion of such contract was that she and her family were about to terminate their relations with the decedent; that upon his solicitation and promise, she abandoned her plan and continued her services; that the promise of the decedent was that if she would continue to care for him as theretofore as long as he lived, he would convey to her that certain portion of his farm lying on the north side of the road and comprising 100 acres more or less. She alleged that she had performed on her part and that the decedent had failed to do so. She prayed that the executor be empowered and ordered to make such conveyance to her. Pending the action the executor sold and conveyed the real estate to a purchaser on March 1, 1928. Thereafter the plaintiff amended her petition and alleged such sale and prayed damages for breach of the contract. She alleged the amount of her damage to be the value of the real estate thus contracted for and that such value was $7500. She also filed an amendment to her first count, by alleging that the value of her services was $7500, the amount thus named being a very substantial increase- over her original claim. The jury allowed her a recovery for the full amount claimed, and judgment was entered accordingly.

As indicated above, there was no appeal from this judgment. There was an appeal from the order of the trial court denying a new trial. The appellant has assigned error upon every feature of the record and has argued the same as though he had taken appeal from the judgment. In that respect the appellant has misconceived the scope of the review to which he is entitled. This scope is defined by the motion for new trial. He is entitled to a review here of rulings of the court upon each of such grounds of his motion for new trial as was sufficiently specific to *840 meet the requirements of an assignment of error under our appellate practice. Though the trial court is not concerned with the rules of appellate practice, this court is so concerned. For instance the first ground of the motion for new trial was:

“First. The court erred in sustaining claimant’s objections made to the testimony offered by the executor as shown by the official shorthand reporter’s notes.”

Granting that the foregoing was a sufficient presentation to the trial judge, who was necessarily familiar with the record, which had just been made and which was as yet un-transcribed, and that it might be properly supplemented with appropriate oral argument, yet it afforded no basis for such an assignment of error as is requisite under the appellate practice. If there had been an appeal from the judgment it would open up the whole record of the trial to appropriate assignments of error. But the failure to appeal from the judgment closed the record for the purpose of an appeal, subject only to the particular questions raised and preserved by the motion for new trial. This question is settled by our previous cases. See McElfresh v. McElfresh, 186 Iowa 994, 996; Liddle v. Salter, 180 Iowa 840; and other cases cited therein. The first ground of the motion above set forth was not adequate to sustain an assignment of error upon any specific ruling on the admission of evidence. Thirteen of appellant’s assignments of error are predicated upon rulings on the admission of testimony. All of these rulings inhere in the judgment and were not kept open for the purpose of appeal by the motion for now trial. Grounds of motion assailing the instructions- were adequate to support the assignments of error predicated thereon. The same thing is true as to motions assailing the pleadings. Our consideration of the record will therefore be confined within the scope here indicated.

I. Appellant’s first complaint is directed to the court’s ruling upon his motion for more specific statement. This motion asked that the plaintiff be required to state specifically the time spent by her in the various forms of her services; how much time she spent nursing him; how much time was he confined in the hospital, etc. The court sustained the motion in part and overruled it in its larger part. The ruling was clearly within the discretion of the court. The matters called for were largely *841 evidential. The service extended over a period of sixteen years and was necessarily varied in form. To require such alleged services to be itemized by hours, or by days, or by events, could serve no other practical purpose than to encumber the record with unnecessary details.

The appellant also moved to strike a part of plaintiff’s count One because inconsistent with count Two; and moved to strike a part of count Two because inconsistent with count One. This motion was in the main overruled. We think this ruling was proper; and in any event clearly within the discretion of the court and non-prejudicial to the defendant. There Was no inconsistency in the two counts, as we shall indicate later herein.

II. At the close of the evidence, the defendant moved that the plaintiff be required to elect upon which count of her petition she would proceed. This motion was predicated upon the contention that the two counts were inconsistent. If this premise were correct then clearly the motion should have been sustained. However, this is not a case of pleading inconsistent causes of action where the existence of one of necessity negatives the other. In her first count the plaintiff claims to have performed the alleged services at the behest of the decedent and she alleges the reasonable value thereof. In her second count she pleads that such service was rendered pursuant to a contract with decedent, which contract fixed the compensation she was to receive. A recovery upon either count would bar recovery upon the other. If both were proved, only one recovery could be had. In such a case the primary right of recovery would be upon the contract and not upon the quantum meruit. The jury might have found for plaintiff on the first count rather than upon the second, or vice versa. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to support both counts. She could not foresee whether her evidence in support of the contract would satisfy the jury. The jury might fail to support the second count and yet support the first one. She was not bound to gamble upon such contingency.

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Bluebook (online)
235 N.W. 293, 212 Iowa 837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halstead-v-rohret-iowa-1931.