Keairnes v. Durst

81 N.W. 238, 110 Iowa 114
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 16, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 81 N.W. 238 (Keairnes v. Durst) 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
Keairnes v. Durst, 81 N.W. 238, 110 Iowa 114 (iowa 1899).

Opinion

Hobinson, O. J.

In September, 1895, the defendant leased to the plaintiff a tract of land for the term of one year from the 1st day of March, 1896. The lease provided that the defendant should build a dwelling house before the first day of June, 1896, and crib room for the plaintiff’s com, and required the plaintiff to deliver, as rent, on or before January, 1897, one thousand two hundred bushels of corn at the Banner Mills. The lease also contained the following: “All the crops growing, or in stack, crib, or granary, on said premises, shall be security for all sums due or to become due from party of the second part to the party of the first part, as evidenced by book account or note held by party of the first part.” The plaintiff took possession of and occupied the premises under the lease. He alleges in his petition that in the latter part of the year 1896 and in the first part of the next year he delivered to the defendant one thousand eight hundred and forty-eight bushels and fifty pounds of corn, at the agreed price of ten cents per bushel; that in the year 1896 he furnished to the defendant two horse collars and pads, one lumber wagon, and one pump [116]*116■ cylinder, of the aggregate value of eleven dollars and sev•enty-five cents; and that about February 1, 189 Y, the ■'defendant wrongfully took possession of and converted to 'his own use one colt and ten tons of hay, of the value of •thirty-five dollars. The petition further alleges that nothing Fas been paid by the defendant for the property furnished ■and taken as stated, and demands judgment for three hundred and thirty-six dollars and seventy-five cents, with interest and costs. The answer contains a, general denial of the averments of the petition not admitted, and states that in nrder to enforce his lien for the rent of the premises due in February, 189Y, the defendant commenced against the plaintiff, in justice court, an action aided by a landlord’s attachment, which was levied upon one thousand one hundred and "two bushels of corn grown upon the leased premises, and con-stituting a part of the com for which plaintiff seeks to ■recover; that judgment was rendered in the action in favor ■of the plaintiff for one hundred dollars debt and fifteen dolllars and seventy-five cents costs; that execution for the •.satisfaction of the said judgment was issued, and the one thousand one hundred and two bushels of com specified were ¡sold under the execution for the sum of sixty-six dollars and ¡twelve cents, which was applied on the judgment. The ¡answer further states that in 1896 the plaintiff sold and delivered to the defendant six hundred and sixty-three and two-third bushels of corn, of the value of sixty-six dollars and thirty-six cents, the proceeds of which were applied on .•an account held by the defendant against the plaintiff for •merchandise sold to him and for damages to property, to the amount of eighty-three dollars and seventy-five cents. The answer further avers that, on the eighteenth day of February, 189Y, the defendant became the owner of a note made 'by the plaintiff to one' Seibold for the sum of two hundred .•and seventeen dollars and twenty-nine cents, together with ¡¡a chattel mortgage given to secure its payment; that at that rtime the amount due on the note was one hundred and [117]*117twenty dollars, and that by virtue of the mortgage the-defendant took and sold the colt which the plaintiff seeks-to recover, for the sum of five dollar's, and applied it on the note; that the hay for which the plaintiff seeks to recoverwas seized under the attachment, and sold under the execution to which reference has been made. The answer furtheralleges that the sum of forty-five dollars an:d fifty-three-cents is dne on the judgment described, and" unpaid, and! that on the twenty-sixth day of February, 1897, the defendant procured another judgment against the plaintiff foor seventeen dollars and thirty-nine cents debt and two dollars- and thirty cents costs, which is unpaid. To the answer the plaintiff filed a reply which stated that, during the pendency of the action in which judgment for one hundred dollars and costs was rendered, the parties hereto agreed that, if' the plaintiff would' immediately deliver to the defendant the corn for which the lease provided, it would be received in full’ payment of the amount which was due under' the-lease-, and that one thousand two hundred bushels of corn were delivered as agreed. The reply admits the makingof the Seibold note, but avers that it was transferred after maturity, when but one hundred and nineteen dollars weredne thereon, and that when it was so transferred the payee was owing to the plaintiff forty-six dollars and fifty- cents,, which should be applied on the note; that, for the collection of the seventy-two dollars and fifty cents which remained unpaid i on' the note, the defendant seized under-the mortgage, and sold, personal property to the aggregate value of two hundred and ninety-seven dollars; that the-property sold for one hundred- and fifty-one dollars and thirty-five cents, leaving a balance due the plaintiff, after-deducting the remainder of the note, of seventy-eight dollars- and eighty-five cents, computed on the price for which the-property sold, or two hundred and twenty-four dollars and fifty cents, computed on its actual value; that the plaintiff was damaged by the unlawful sale of more of the property [118]*118than was required to pay the balance due in the sum of two hundred dollars, for which judgment is asked. The reply further alleges that the plaintiff has been damaged by the failure of the defendant to cancel the judgment for one hundred dollars and costs, in the sum of ten dollars, and for that, judgment is also asked. The defendant filed a motion which asked the court “to strike from plaintiff’s reply all that part thereof contained in the last clause of paragraph thereof for the reason that the same is not properly pleaded as a counterclaim, and the same is irrelevant and immaterial, and to strike each and every paragraph of said reply for the reason that the same is inconsistent with the petition.” The motion was overruled. The verdict returned was for the sum of three hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifteen cents, but the court, with the consent of the plaintiff, reduced the sum to two hundred and forty dollars, for which judgment was rendered.

1 2 [119]*1193 [118]*118I. The defendant complains of the overruling of his motion to strike. The first part of it, referring to “the last clause of the paragraph,” is unintelligible, because there are several paragraphs in the reply, and the particular one referred to is not designated, and for that reason the first part-of the motion was properly overruled. The remainder of the motion may be regarded as assailing each paragraph of the reply. Section 3576 of the Code provides that: “There shall be no reply, except: (1) Where a counterclaim is alleged.' (2) Where some matter is alleged in the answer to which the plaintiff claims to have a defense by reason of the existence of some fact which avoids the matter alleged in the answer.” The parts of the reply which refer to the agreement to cancel the judgment for one hundred dollars and costs, and to the amount which it is alleged should have •been, but was not credited on the Seibold note, may be regarded as pleading matter in confession and avoidance of a part of the allegations of the answer. The only part of [119]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 N.W. 238, 110 Iowa 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keairnes-v-durst-iowa-1899.