Iowa Farm Credit Corp. v. Sawyer

230 N.W. 409, 210 Iowa 43
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketNo. 40181.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 230 N.W. 409 (Iowa Farm Credit Corp. v. Sawyer) 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
Iowa Farm Credit Corp. v. Sawyer, 230 N.W. 409, 210 Iowa 43 (iowa 1930).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

On August 19, 1929, the petitioner, Iowa Farm Credit Corporation, as plaintiff, filed in the municipal court of Des Moines a petition, seeking to recover from George Clear-man, as defendant, $845.89, with interest, on two promissory notes, dated August 14, 1922, and October 6, 1922. For the sake of convenience, hereafter Clearman will be referred to as the defendant, and the Iowa Farm Credit Corporation as the petitioner.

Each note aforesaid, by its express terms, was payable at Dos Moines. Subsequently, while the petition was thus pending, the defendant filed his sworn answer thereto, sotting forth as a complete defense fraud in the inception of the contract. In an amendment -to the answer, the defendant asserted that the fraud was in the inception of not only the present notes, which are renewals, but also their predecessors, the originals. Also, the defendant pleaded that Johnson County is his residence. When filing his answer, the defendant also presented an application for a transfer of the cause to Johnson County, under Section 11411 of the 1927 Code, hereinafter quoted. As before stated, it was held by the court that the answer sufficiently set up a defense of fraud, and the relief demanded in the application was granted, and the cause transferred from Polk to Johnson County.

I. But the petitioner maintains that the amended answer did not contain a complete defense because there is no allegation therein concerning defendant’s damages growing out of the fraud. Therefore, he says, there can be no transfer of the cause under said Section 11411 of the 1927 Code, which reads:

“In an action brought on a written contract in the county where the contract by its express terms is to be performed, in which a defendant to said action, residing in a different county in the state, has filed a sworn answer alleging fraud in the inception of the contract constituting a complete defense thereto, such defendant, upon application and the filing of a sufficient bond, may have such action transferred to the district court of the county of his residence.”

*45 It does appear in the answer that the petitioner, as an inducement to obtaining the notes from the defendant, who was a farmer, represented.: First, that it was necessary for the defendant to be a stockholder of the corporation, in order to obtain a farm loan therefrom; and second, that the petitioner was financially able to loan, and had the express approval of the United States Federal Farm Loan Board for loaning, money. Money was to be borrowed from the corporation by the defendant according to the amount of stock subscribed by him. Accordingly, the defendant bought stock, and executed the notes aforesaid, as part of the transaction. As a matter of fact, however, according to the answer, the petitioner was not financially able to make, nor did it have the approval of the United States Federal Farm Loan Board for making, farm loans. Hence, defendant could obtain no loan from petitioner, although he had subscribed for the necessary stock. The only reason why defendant bought the stock and, executed the notes aforesaid was to obtain said loan. Those fraudulent misrepresentations were material and substantial. Through petitioner’s purported fraud, defendant was deprived of the only consideration which prompted his action in.executing the notes.

Damages sufficiently appear, according to the allegations, for the purposes of the motion, within Section 11411, supra, to transfer the cause from the municipal court to Johnson County, the place of defendant’s residence.

II. Notwithstanding the sufficiency of the answer in that regard, the petitioner contends that there was in fact no complete answer when the motion to transfer was first made. After such motion was filed, an amendment was made, to cure a defect in the original answer. Afterwards, the defendant filed an amended application for a change of venue. Petitioner argues that there should be but one answer and one motion to transfer the cause or change the venue. With this theory, as applied to the facts in the case at bar, we are constrained to disagree. In effect, under the circumstances, there was but one final answer and one final motion. We have just had occasion to consider this proposition in the case known as Wright v. Thompson, 209 Iowa 1133. There we held adversely *46 to petitioners’ claim. During the discussion in the Wright case, we said:

“Manifestly, the spirit of the statute [Section 11411] under consideration is to enable the defendant to have the action tried at the domicile of the defendant, rather than at the place of performance, as specified in the contract, when the defendant, under oath, has pleaded facts alleging fraud in the inception of the contract constituting a complete defense thereto. It would be a very narrow and cramped construction of the statute to hold that, with such objects in view, the party seeking the change should be held literally and technically to any error of omission in the original answer filed, regardless of the good faith with which the answer and motion to change were filed, and regardless of the facts in the case. In other words, we think it is more in keeping with the spirit of the statute and the purpose for which it was enacted that if, in good faith, the defendant files an answer in a good-faith and apparent attempt to comply with the terms of the statute, and subsequently it is discovered that, by oversight or otherwise, something important had been omitted from the answer, the defendant should be permitted to amend the answer and set up the allegations and facts. These allegations must be in the answer, not in a motion or demurrer or other pleading; but we think the good-faith statement of the issue of fraud in the inception of the transaction may be made in either the original answer or in an amendment thereto. To hold otherwise would be to inject into this matter of pleading a technicality not in harmony with the spirit of pleading under the Iowa practice.”

Further discussion is unnecessary. Consequently, under the rule thus adopted, it is proper for defendant to file an amended answer and then renew his motion for the transfer.

III. However the law may be in relation to the sufficiency of the answer and the motion to transfer, petitioner further complains because the municipal court permitted the defendant to file the statutory bond later than the period allowed by law. Such order to transfer was made by the municipal court September 21, 1929. Therein the statutory bond was fixed at $300. That order thus allowing the transfer and fixing the *47 bond was filed with the clerk of the municipal court on the same day. Although the order was thus made and filed, the bond was not furnished until the morning of September 26th thereafter. Section 11419 of the 1927 Code provides:

‘ ‘ If the order for the change is granted in vacation, it must be perfected by noon of the second day after the order is received by the clerk, and if granted during term time, by the morning of the second day thereafter, or before the cause is reached for trial, if sooner reached, or such change, whether granted in term or vacation, will be waived, and the cause tried as though no such order had been granted. ’ ’

The order for the change was granted in term time.

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230 N.W. 409, 210 Iowa 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-farm-credit-corp-v-sawyer-iowa-1930.