Hogan v. Ross

205 N.W. 208, 200 Iowa 519
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 29, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 205 N.W. 208 (Hogan v. Ross) 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
Hogan v. Ross, 205 N.W. 208, 200 Iowa 519 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

De Graff, J.

Plaintiff commenced this action to foreclose a real estate mortgage executed by the defendants as part consideration in the exchange of properties between them. With this phase of the case the appeal is only incidentally concerned.

The controversy has its inception in the allegations of the defendants as found in their cross-petition. The prayer of the defendants is for a rescission, and they ask that they be put in statu quo. This claim is based on certain alleged fraud and misrepresentation oh the part of the plaintiff in effectuating a sale or exchange to defendants of a certain 315-acre farm situated in Johnson County, Iowa.

With the law applicable to the issues there is little ground for quarrel. The case suggests jrarely fact questions presently to be noted. Preliminary to a statement of the issues, it may be observed that appellee, prior to the filing and service of the abstract of record by appellant, filed his motion to dismiss the appeal. This motion is based on statutory grounds, and the ruling thereon involves the -application of the statute to the record facts. By way of brief summary, the judgment in this cause was entered against the defendants July 9, 1923. Notice of appeal was served January 4, 1924. The January, 1924, term of this court began January 8th. Under the rule of .statute (Section 4120, Code of 1897) then in force, “if an abstract of record is not filed by appellant thirty days before the second term after the appeal was taken, unless further time is given by the court or a judge thereof for cause shown, the appellee may file an abstract of such matters of record as are necessary, or. may file a copy of the final judgment or order appealed from, or other matters required, certified to by dhe clerk of the trial court, and cause the case tó be docketed, and the appeal upon motion shall be dismissed, or the judgment or order affirmed.”

The material inquiry, then, is whether the appellant filed his abstract thirty days before the second term (September, *521 1924) after the appeal was taken. See Sections 4116-4120, Code of 1897. The abstract of record was filed August 8, 1924. The notice of appeal was not served thirty days before the first day of the January, 1924, term of this court. It is apparent, therefore, that the appeal was not taken for the January, 1924, term, and that the first term was the May, 1924, term. The abstract was filed more than thirty days before the second term after the appeal was taken, or before the September, 1924, term, commencing September 16, 1924.

We have heretofore construed this rule in Hanson v. Hammell, 107 Iowa 171; Newbury v. Getchell & Martin Lbr. & Mfg. Co., 106 Iowa 140. The appellant having filed his abstract more than thirty days before the second term after the appeal was taken, his right to prosecute the appeal exists. The motion to dismiss is overruled.

We now turn to the issues and the record facts having a material bearing thereon. Plaintiff’s petition in foreclosure was filed August 16, 1922. The written contract for the exchange of properties bears date August 9, 1919. original cross-petition was filed September i9# 1922. It may be stated at the outset that, during the interval of time between the signing of the contract and the filing of the cross-petition, — a period of more than three years, — no claim or assertion of fraud or misrepresentation was made by defendants. The first echo is found in the cross-petition, finding its provocation in the attempt on the part of the plaintiff to secure himself by a foreclosure proceeding.

It may be further stated that, upon the consummation of the contract giving rise to the instant controversy, a deed to this farm was executed by plaintiff and delivered to defendant, accompanied by an abstract showing merchantable title, and that defendants took possession of said farm, leased same to three tenants successively, and held possession and exercised full dominion over said farm during the period in question. In the light of these statements, one naturally inquires the nature and character of the fraudulent representation upon which defendants predicate their right of rescission. We are dealing with an executed contract, and ordinarily a court will hesitate to de *522 clare a rescission after more than three years have elapsed from the time that the fraud is alleged to have been perpetrated.

The primary claim of the plaintiff in his reply to the cross-petition of the defendants is that the latter have not acted with reasonable diligence, and must be held, as a matter of law, to be guilty of laches sufficient to work an estoppel. This in fact is the only debatable question, except, as incidental thereto, to inquire what prejudice or damage was suffered by the plaintiff on account of such delay. It is recognized that a party asking rescission must act with reasonable promptness after discovery of fraud, but rescission is not primarily dependent on mere lapse of time. The particular circumstances of each case are the controlling consideration. Rohr v. Shaffer, 178 Iowa 943. Canceling an executed contract is the exercise of one of the most extraordinary powers of a court of equity, and it ought not to be exercised unless the alleged fraud is satisfactorily shown.

If it appears that the complaining party had knowledge of the claimed fraud or of such facts as would naturally suggest it, and would cause a person of ordinary prudence to investigate and to ascertain the truth, equity will be slow to forgive the laches and afterward relieve by rescission. Bean v. Bickley, 187 Iowa 689; Brechwald v. Small, 180 Iowa 22; McNair v. Sockriter, 199 Iowa 1176.

In reviewing the issues and the evidence, these principles of equity jurisprudence must be borne in mind. In the original cross-petition it was alleged by the defendants that the agents of the plaintiff in effecting the exchange of properties ‘ ‘ stated to the defendant Ross at different times that he need not be afraid of water upon this farm; that it had never overflowed in whole or in part but once in thirty-four years.” To this the plaintiff replied by denial, charging laches, and by admitting that the farm had in whole or in part overflowed more than once within thirty-four years. Subsequently, and approximately nine months thereafter, defendants amended their cross-petition and tendered a new issue, predicated on alleged misrepresentations by the agents of plaintiff as to the boundaries of the farm, as disclosed in the following averment:

“And that at said time, and while the said agents of the plaintiff were so showing said farm to the defendant N. K. *523 ■Ross, and while the said parties were upon said farm, the said agents of the plaintiff pointed out to this defendant, N. K. Ross, what they denominated as the west, south, and east boundary lines of said farm, and verbally told the defendant that the land included in the boundary lines that they pointed out were 315 acres. * * * that the boundary lines so pointed out by said-agents were not the true boundary lines of said farm, and that the land included in the said boundary lines so pointed out included other land than this farm, and did not include 315 acres of the farm in controversy.”

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205 N.W. 208, 200 Iowa 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-ross-iowa-1925.