Richards v. Burden

59 Iowa 723
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 21, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Iowa 723 (Richards v. Burden) 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
Richards v. Burden, 59 Iowa 723 (iowa 1882).

Opinions

Dat, J.

This action was commenced on the 18th day of September, 1869. Eor nearly nine years it was pending in the court below. On the 29th day of July, 1878, final decree was entered in the court below, which was satisfactory to neither party. On the 20th day of September, 1878, the defendants perfected their appeal. On the 11th day of October, 1878, the plaintiff perfected an appeal. The cause involved the partnership business of the plaintiff and the defendant, George Burden, for a period of about fifteen years, and questions of a collateral nature connected with the partnership. The parties differ, almost toto ccelo, and the controversy has engendered a bitterness of feeling greatly to be deplored. In view of the many points in controversy, the great mass of the testimony, its unusually conflicting character, and the pertinacity with which the views of the respective parties are urged, it is scarcely to be hoped that we will be able to make a disposition of the case more satisfactory to the parties than that made by the referee and the court below. Where questions of fact are to be determined upon conflicting evidence, it rarely happens that a conclusion can be reached which will meet with universal approval from parties indifferent as to the result, much less from parties deeply interested upon opposite sides. Oftentimes the tribunal which has to determine can only say that the conclusion adopted is more probably correct than its opposite, and is forced to admit that against the [725]*725view reached objections may be urged which it is not possible to answer. We freely admit that we have found ourselves in this condition as to some of the questions of fact involved in this case. And yet, if no conclusion may be reached and acted upon, against which an unanswerable objection exists, individuals and courts must leave many of the most important business controversies undetermined. It is a matter of universal experience that opposite views may be maintained by unanswerable arguments. In such cases the only reasonable course is to adopt the more probable views.

In our consideration of the various questions at issue between the parties, it will not be practicable, and if practicable, it would not be profitable, to discuss all the testimony directly or remotely bearing upon them. We shall attempt no more than an allusion to the prominent features of the testimony which control our judgment. Where the evidence comes in direct conflict, and we are unable to determine a preponderance either way, we shall adopt the conclusion which in view of the whole case seems to us the more reasonable. When this test is wanting, and the evidence seems to be in equilibrio, we shall decide adversely to the party on whom rests the burden of proof. We now proceed to a consideration of the various questions in controversy between the parties, in an order somewhat different from that pursued by counsel,

I. As to the claim of Mrs. Burden being usurious.

During the years 1854 and 1855. Mrs. Burden, then Mrs. Holmes, placed in the hands of the plaintiff as a member of the firms to which he belonged, as shown by the evidence and found by the referee, $10,224.72. An important question of difference between the parties, is as to the contract under which the money was received. The plaintiff insists that the money was received as a loan, under an usurious agreement for the payment of twenty per cent per annum interest. Mrs. Burden insists that the money was furnished to the firms as her agent to be employed by them in time entries, they to account for one-half of the profits, and to have the other half as compensation for their services. The referee and the court below sustained the view of the defendant, Mrs. Burden, as to this question, and held that the agreement was not usurious. On the 30th day of May, 1856, the plaintiff rendered to Mrs. Eliza A. Holmes, now Mrs. Burden, a statement of account. Appended to this account he wrote as follows: “Eliza A. Holmes has paid to mo the above amounts in all, and she should receive them and twenty per cent., in all from T. R. & D. and T. R. & B., from date of being received to this date, less her debit account and one-half house expenses.” Ihe plaintiff places great reliance upon this memorandum as sustaining his view of the case. In our opinion it is equally consistent with the view of the defendant, Mrs. Burden. The evidence shows that in the time entry business forty peícent was exacted of the party for whom the entry was made. If he paid for the entry, forty per cent profit was realized upon the investment. At the time this memorandum was made it was supposed by the parties that, if the entry was forfeited and the firm had to keep the land, the land was worth as much as the original investment and forty per cent thereon. So that, in either event, the firm supposed that investments made were yielding a profit of forty per cent. [726]*726It is therefore perfectly consistent with the claim of Mrs. Burden that the plaintiff should say, when rendering his account, that Mrs. Holmes should receive the various sums advanced, and twenty per cent from date of being received. On the 4th of July, 1856, the plaintiff rendered another account in. which the sums due are designated as principal and interest. The fact that the plaintiff, in estimating the amount due Mrs. Burden, designated the amount above the principul sum received as interest, is a circumstance entitled to only slight consideration, in view of the other testimony in the case. The plaintiff’s understanding of the manner in which this money was to be employed is derived from a letter which he wrote to the defendant, Mrs. Burden, on the 25th day of April, 1854, just after he had received the second installment of money. In this letter he says: “I have invested all your funds, $'2,000, at twenty per cent, without any charge for gold or drafts. I took the deeds in my name for convenience, and have executed a deed to you, so that the title is in you if I should be taken away. I will send you a description of the lands by and by when I have more time. The reason of my doing this is, that while you are just as safe, it saves you a great deal of trouble in constantly making deeds in Rockford, and sending to settlers here when they pay up. You understand that, you have now $8,000 invested in improved lands in Iowa, at $1.05 per acre, most, indeed I believe all, being for one year from the time the investment was made. All this draws twenty per cent. So that your income from this source is $600 per year, and, as soon as the money begins to be paid in, you can invest at the same rate, both principal and interest. I have no doubt but that you can do this, or I can for you, for five years yet at least. If we arc economical, in that time you can double your money, besides living, and I now think I can make mine ten times as big. I had invested Melinda’s at 40 per cent. The more I see of this business and of the men who have been in it for ten or fifteen years, the more confident I am that there is no chance for failure. Moreover, I say now, and you may keep the letter, that if you or Melinda lose anything by sending money here, or even fail of making as much as you possibly could in Illinois, I will make up the balance out of my own pocket.” This letter is altogether inconsistent with the notion that the money was received as a loan to be repaid with interest.

The time location book of B. B. Richards, Taylor & Richards, and Taylor, Richards & David, contains the name of Eliza A.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Iowa 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-burden-iowa-1882.