Morss v. Johnson
This text of 38 Iowa 430 (Morss v. Johnson) 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.
Opinion
The court, among other instructions, directed the jury that if “ the defendant was so ignorant as not to understand the legal effect of the indorsements on the notes, and the plaintiff knowing the defendant was ignorant in regard to the legal effect of [431]*431the indorsements,” falsely and fraudulently made tlie representations charged, he cannot recover.
We are not called upon to inquire into the correctness of this instruction. Having been given by the court as a rule'of law, the jury were to be guided, by it in making up their verdict. Indeed counsel for defendant maintains its correctness by the citation of authorities, and counsel for plaintiff do not seriously question it.
In our opinion the verdict of the jury is in conflict with this instruction. There is an utter want of evidence to establish that plaintiff knew defendant to be ignorant of the legal effect of the indorsements. Defendant in his testimony does not intimate that plaintiff had any knowledge on that subject. On the contrary he states that he wrote his signature to the indorsements, and it further appears from his evidence, that the transaction was carried on as we would expect to see such business done by men of ordinary intelligence and capacity. Plaintiff positively states that he had no reason to suspect, and did not know, that defendant was ignorant of the true effect of the indorsements signed by him.
The judgment of the Circuit Court- is
Eeversbd.
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38 Iowa 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morss-v-johnson-iowa-1874.