Koster v. Seney

69 N.W. 868, 100 Iowa 558
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 20, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 N.W. 868 (Koster v. Seney) 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
Koster v. Seney, 69 N.W. 868, 100 Iowa 558 (iowa 1897).

Opinions

Deemer, J.

The petition contains three counts, and sets out three causes of action, substantially as follows: The first count alleges that on or about the first day of January, 1894, the plaintiffs, K. Koster and P. Koster, were, and for a long time had been, the owners of four horses, particularly described, one set of work harness, and about two hundred and fifty bushels of corn; that on or about the date specified, the defendant did wilfully, wrongfully, and maliciously, for the purpose of depriving the plaintiffs of the ownership of said property, and with intent to injure, oppress, and defraud them, take possession of said property, and wilfully, wrongfully, and maliciously convert it to his own use. The second count states that in March, 1893, the plaintiffs purchased two horses of the defendant, who warranted them to be nine years old; that the warranty was relied upon by the plaintiffs in making the purchase, and known to be false by the defendant. The third count states that in March, 1893, the plaintiffs purchased a horse of the defendant, who warranted him to be sound, and that the plaintiffs relied upon that warranty; that before delivery of the horse was made, the plaintiffs discovered that the horse was sick, and refused to accept him; that thereupon the defendant represented and warranted that the ailment was temporary, and that the horse would recover, but that, if he did not, the defendant would refund the price paid for him; that the horse was then accepted, but was in fact sick of a fatal disease, and died soon after he was [560]*560received by the plaintiffs. Judgment is demanded for actual damages to the amount of eight hundred and ten dollars, and for exemplary damages in the sum of two thousand one hundred dollars. The answer contains a general denial, and alleges as an affirmative defense that in March, 1898, the plaintiffs executed and delivered to the defendant a chattel mortgage on the property described in the first count of the petition to secure the payment of two promissory notes, one of which was for the sum of seven hundred and twenty-two dollars and seventy-five cents, payable on or before October 1, 1893, and the other was for the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, payable on or before October 4, 1894, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum; that on the eighteenth day of December, 1893, the sum of twenty-seven dollars and ninety-one cents remained due on the first note, and nothing had been paid on the other; that the defendant had been credibly informed that the plaintiffs had sold some of the mortgaged property without his knowledge or consent, with intent to defraud him, and that on the day last specified he placed the mortgage in the hands of the sheriff, as his agent, to take possession of enough of the mortgaged property to pay the amount due on the first note, and costs and expenses; that thereupon the sheriff took possession of about two hundred bushels of corn, the value of about forty dollars, and afterwards, at the request of the plaintiffs, took possession of the four horses and one set of harness, described in the first count of the petition, and in January, 1894, sold all of the property so taken, and indorsed the proceeds on the two notes. In other divisions of the answer the defendant pleads the making of the notes and the execution of the mortgage by the plaintiffs, and the foreclosure of the latter according to the authority which it conferred, and admits the sale of the [561]*561horses to the plaintiffs, including those described in the petition; but alleges that the contract of sale was in writing, and did not contain the warranties claimed by the plaintiffs, and that one hundred and twenty-five dollars of the contract price are unpaid. The plaintiffs filed a reply which admitted the execution of the larger of the two notes, but averred that the amount thereof was never due. Several items which went to make the consideration of the note were set out and alleged to be erroneous, and among them was one of eleven dollars, which it is alleged was for twelve numbers in a certain lottery or raffle in which the defendant sold numbers to several persons, and by which he proposed to raffle off a certain piano, which was to be the property of the holder of the winning number, to be determined by chance: that the raffle has never taken place; that the defendant retains the piano, and that the plaintiffs have never received any consideration for the item. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of eight hundred and seventeen dollars and four cents, and found specially that three hundred and seventeen dollars and four cents were due on the first count of the petition, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to five hundred dollars as exemplary damages.

1 I. Interrogatories were submitted to the jury asking if they found any damages on the causes of action set out in the second and third counts of the petition, but were not answered, and from this fact, and the special findings returned, it is clear that the jury found in favor of the defendant on the second and third counts, and that the only questions involved in this appeal are those which grow out of the first count. The appellees have filed an additional abstract, which denies that the abstract of appellant contains all the evidence introduced on the trial, and states that the two abstracts together [562]*562do not contain all the evidence introduced and heard. That it is not denied, and must be taken as true. Goode v. Stearns, 82 Iowa, 710 (47 N. W. Rep. 893); Hopkins v. Railway Co., 94 Iowa, 752 (64 N. W. Rep. 603). Moreover, the abstract of the appellant shows affirmatively that the bill of exception was not filed within the time fixed by order of the court and the agreement of parties, and- it does not appear that any evidence was made of record. A stipulation of the parties which provides for the submission of the cause on the two abstracts, and waives a transcript of the record, has been filed. But that does not answer the purpose of a denial of the additional abstract, nor show that the two abstracts contain all the evidence upon which the case was heard. In view of the condition in which the record appears, we cannot determine any question which requires an examination of the evidence, and as the appellees have not filed an argument, we will follow our practice in such cases, and consider only those questions which seem to be of ■ controlling importance.

2 II. The court, in referring to the mortgage and two notes which it was designed to secure, charged the jury as follows: “You are instructed, that under the mortgage defendant had the right to take possession of all the property therein described, at any time he chose to do so, and no damage could be assessed against him for such taking. He did not, however, have any right to sell said property before the debt secured thereby became due. In other words, while he would have a right, under said mortgage, to take possession of all the property therein described, for the purpose of preserving the same until the debt became due, he would have no right to sell said property unless the debt secured by said mortgage, or some part of it, was due; and, if he did sell said property, or any part of it, before the debt [563]

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.W. 868, 100 Iowa 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koster-v-seney-iowa-1897.