Reeves & Co. v. Lamm Bros.

112 N.W. 642, 135 Iowa 201
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 3, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 N.W. 642 (Reeves & Co. v. Lamm Bros.) 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
Reeves & Co. v. Lamm Bros., 112 N.W. 642, 135 Iowa 201 (iowa 1907).

Opinion

Weaver, C. J.

On September 3, 1901, Martin Lamm and George Lamm were engaged in business as dealers in agricultural implements at Ackley, Iowa, and one or botb of the partners owned or occupied farm lands in that vicinity. As a firm they were also the local agents of the plaintiff company for the sale of its threshing machines. ' On the date named said firm signed and delivered to an agent of the plaintiff an order for a threshing machine outfit, consisting of a separator, with band cutter, and feeder and other attachments, for an aggregate agreed price of $1,040, which machinery the said brothers agreed to receive, pay freight charges thereon from a named point, and at the same time settle for said property by the delivery of certain other property in exchange and by paying the difference of $566.25 in cash or in note due December 1, 1901. The order provided that the shipment should be made to the purchasers in care , of Lamm Bros, at Ackley, and also contained a clause in the following words: “ And failing to receive said machinery, or to pay said moneys or to execute and deliver said notes, this order shall stand as the purchaser’s written obligation, and have the same force and effect as notes, for all sums not paid in cash; and Reeves & Go. shall be discharged from any and all liability under the warranty or otherwise.” To the order there was attached a printed form of warranty, to the terms of which we need not further refer at this time.

After the receipt of this order, plaintiff shipped a machine to Ackley, but the fact as to whom the consignment was made is a matter of dispute. It is the claim of defendants that, instead of shipping the machine to them, as j:>rovided in the order, plaintiff made the shipment in its own [203]*203name, but in care of tbe defendants, and at the same time notified the defendants that it would send an agent to assist in setting it up and starting its operation. Whatever may be the truth as to this, it is undisputed that the machine did arrive at Ackley; but, according to the contention of the defendants, it arrived in a broken and incomplete condition, and they deny that they ever accepted it or became in any manner responsible for its price. One or more agents of the plaintiff followed the machinery to Ackley and took some part in setting it up, but there is a sharp conflict in the testimony concerning the details of the transaction at this point. It is conceded, however, that certain parts of the outfit were found to be broken or defective, and time was taken by the agent to send for repairs. A few days later, another agent appeared, who says, in substance, that he advised defendants that the trouble with making the machine work was owing to a misplacement of the grate under the cylinder, and that the machine was not speeded right and required a smaller pulley, and he proposed that, if defendants’ would first execute and deliver their note for the purchase money, he would proceed to remedy the defects and make the machine work. Defendants refused to execute or deliver the note until the machine was put in condition for successful operation. There was also some controversy over a matter of freight.

These disputes not being adjusted, plaintiff at once instituted an action at law on said written order, alleging the delivery of the machinery in accordance with the terms of the writing and defendants’ refusal to settle for the same, and asking judgment for the contract price. To that action the defendants appeared and pleaded to the merits, denying the delivery of the machine and the performance of the conditions on part of the plaintiff. They also pleaded a warranty of the machine by the plaintiff, and a breach thereof, and a rescission of the order on account of such breach. On trial of these issues there was a verdict for the plaintiff, after [204]*204which the defendants filed a motion in arrest of judgment, on the ground that the verdict was not supported by the evidence, was contrary to law, and that the action had been prematurely brought. This motion was sustained, and a judgment entered against plaintiff for costs of suit. Neither the ruling on the motion nor the entry of judgment for costs indicates whether such order or judgment was based upon the merits of the case, or ujpon the matters claimed in abatement. Plaintiff appealed from said judgment to this court, where the action of the district court was approved and affirmed in an opinion holding that the action had been prematurely begun. Reeves & Co. v. Lamm, 120 Iowa, 283. Thereafter this suit was begun on the same alleged cause of action, and defendants having pleaded substantially the same defenses, also set up, by way of further answer, the judgment entered in the former case as a full and complete prior adjudication of the matters in controversy. This issue of prior adjudication was by agreement of the parties submitted to the court without a jury and decided against the defendant. Trial then proceeded to a jury upon other issues, and there was a verdict and judgment for the defendants. The plaintiff has appealed from said judgment and defendants have also appealed from the ruling against them on their plea of prior adjudication.

1, Judgments: presumption as to ground of decision: conclusiveness. I. As the last-mentioned appeal, if well founded, will determine the rights of the parties, we give it first attention. It must be admitted that the issue presented by the answer in the first case went to the right of the plaintiff to recover upon the merits oi the controversy. The motion in arrest of judgment raised the same propositions, and the further distinct proposition that the action should be abated as having been prematurely brought. As already stated, the district court sustained this motion generally, and in entering judgment against the plaintiff for costs did not indicate in any manner whether the same was grounded upon the merits [205]*205of the case or upon the matter in abatement. Our statute (Code, section 3771) provides that: “Where matter in abatement is pleaded in connection with other matter which is not such, the finding of the jury or court must distinguish between the matter in abatement and matter in bar, and the judgment must, if it is rendered on matter in abatement and not on the merits, so declare.”

Under this provision we have held that, where no such entry or declaration appears in express words or by reasonable implication in the record, this court is bound to presume that the judgment was upon the merits. Garrettson v. Ferrall, 92 Iowa, 728. In each case where we have refused to apply this rule, it was made to clearly appear from the record of the district court that the prior judgment was based solely upon the matter in abatement. Boyer v Austin, 54 Iowa, 402; Atkins v. Anderson, 63 Iowa, 741; Kern v. Wilson, 82 Iowa, 407; Harrison v. Ins. Co., 102 Iowa, 112. In the Garrettson case, supra, we also held that we could not dispose of such question by reference to the opinion of this court upon an appeal from the former judgment, but the same must be disposed of solely from the record presented in the instant case. Unless we are to disregard this statute and overrule our precedents thereunder, there seems to be no escape from the conclusion that the defendants’ plea of .former adjudication was well grounded, and that the trial court erred in overruling it.

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Bluebook (online)
112 N.W. 642, 135 Iowa 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-co-v-lamm-bros-iowa-1907.