Leipird v. Stotler

66 N.W. 150, 97 Iowa 169
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 3, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 N.W. 150 (Leipird v. Stotler) 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
Leipird v. Stotler, 66 N.W. 150, 97 Iowa 169 (iowa 1896).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

The action is brought to recover from the defendant the amount of a promissory note executed by his wife in her lifetime, and which, it is alleged, has been lost and stolen since the decease of the wife, and for certain work and labor performed by plaintiff as housekeeper for defendant since the death of his wife. It is alleged that the defendant’s wife died possessed of a large amount of money, notes, household and kitchen furniture, and a large amount of other property, aggregating in value the sum of five thousand dollars; that no administration was had upon her estate, but that defendant took possession of all of said property, and converted it to his own use. And it is further averred that, after the death of his wife, defendant promised and agreed to pay his wife’s note. In the second count of the petition, plaintiff alleged that she performed work and labor for defendant, at his instance and request, from August 16,1889, up to the middle of November, 1889, the reasonable [171]*171value of which was seventy-five dollars. The defendant, in answer, states, on information and belief, that some such note as plaintiff describes was executed by his wife during her lifetime, but states that he never saw it, and denies liability thereon; admits that no administration has been had on his wife’s estate, and avers that she had no property at the time of her decease, save two lots in the town of Mt. Vernon, which were sold by his wife’s heirs, and a few household goods, furniture, and piano, which are exempt to defendant, as surviving husband; denies that his wife left a large amount of property, and avers that he received no part of the consideration for the Mt. Vernon lots, and denies that he has converted any property, owned by his wife, to which he was not legally entitled; denies that he promised to pay the note, and denies liability on such a promise, even if made. He ' further avers that he paid the doctor’s bills and fun- . eral expenses for his wife, and since her death has erected a monument to her memory, and that these expenses largely exceed the amount of the property left by her. And he asks that, if any property of his wife be found subject to execution, the action be abated until administration be had of her estate. The defendant denied in toto plaintiff’s claim for services, and said that her services were rendered as a mere gratuity, and that he had already paid her, in money, and property, and house rent, more than her services amounted to. He also, in an amendment to his answer, denied the execution of the note by his wife. The plaintiff, in reply, admitted having received from defendant the sum of thirty dollars, and further pleaded that she indorsed the same upon the note given her by his wife. These were, in substance, the issues on which the case was tried, and the jury found a verdict for plaintiff for the sum of two hundred and twenty-four dollars and forty-five cents. The note on [172]*172which the action is bottomed, was for two hundred dollars, and was executed some time in May, 1888, and drew eight per cent, interest from that date. The appellant concedes that there is a hopeless conflict in the evidence, and that there is sufficient, if believed by the jury, to warrant the verdict returned. His complaint is of the rulings made by the court during the progress of the trial. The instructions given by the court are not assailed in argument, and we may observe, in passing, that they are even more favorable to the defendant than he was entitled to.

1 I. The plaintiff testified that after the death of defendant’s wife, who was her sister, she lost the note, which is the subject of the suit, after she went to work for the defendant, and that she believed the defendant had taken it; that she accused the defendant of having done so, in answer to which accusation defendant said, that “I should have every cent - of ray money on the note.” The defendant objected to the questions which elicited this testimony, and further moved to exclude the answers, “as being incompetent and immaterial, and a verbal promise to pay the debt of another.” Thereupon the court made the following record: “Motion overruled, and defendant excepts. The objection is overruled on the theory that it be followed up with other testimony to make it material and competent.’’ This is all of the record made with reference to this testimony. It was not followed up by other testimony, but the defendant did not thereafter renew his motion, or ask for a further ruling on the motion as it then stood. That such testimony might have been produced, is quite evident. If, during the further progress of the trial, it had been shown that this promise of the defendant was made upon a new and independent consideration, to accomplish some purpose of his own — e. g., to prevent administration of his wife’s [173]*173estate, to save the expense thereof, or for any other reason, which promised a benefit or advantage to him —then the promise would not be collateral. Consequently, the ruling of the court below, at the time it was made, was strictly proper, and it was the duty of defendant’s counsel to call the court’s attention to the fact that this promised testimony had not been forthcoming. As they did not do this, there was no error.

2 II. Defendant complains of the ruling of the court in allowing plaintiff to testify as to certain conversations had by her, with her sister before her death. He insists that such conversations were inadmissible, under section 8639, of the Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 N.W. 150, 97 Iowa 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leipird-v-stotler-iowa-1896.