Sawyer v. Iowa Constitutional Prohibitory Amendment Ass'n

177 Iowa 218
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 29, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 177 Iowa 218 (Sawyer v. Iowa Constitutional Prohibitory Amendment Ass'n) 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
Sawyer v. Iowa Constitutional Prohibitory Amendment Ass'n, 177 Iowa 218 (iowa 1916).

Opinions

Gaynor, J.

The abstract in this ease contains 80 pages. Appellee’s denial of appellant’s abstract contains 56 pages. Two amendments by appellant contain, respectively, 7 and 22 pages. This voluminous presentation of the record has made it somewhat difficult for this court to reach and, reaching, dispose of the real questions in dispute. The fact is that, the controversy is not very complicated. The disposition of this case really requires the consideration of but two propositions: (1) That the salary of the plaintiff was fixed for 2% months only; that his salary- for any time longer than that was contingent upon the plaintiff’s raising the money himself with which to pay his own salary, after paying the other expenses of his employer; (2) that the alleged loan of $500 made by the plaintiff to the defendant could not be authorized by the defendant for the purposes to which the loan was to be, and was, appliedin fact, that the loan was not authorized at all. Defendant also alleges that it received no benefit from the transaction, and has not ratified it. It is practically upon these assertions that appellant bases his claim that the judgment below is erroneous.

[220]*220ror : question of fact: conflict of evidence: judgment of trial court: conciu[219]*219I. The first specification of error is that the verdict is not supported by, and is contrary to, the evidence, and con[220]*220trary to law, and that the court, therefore, erred iu overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial. On the question oi tact as to what the agree- # ment touching the salary actually was, the b J J > testimony is in sharp conflict. The appellant points out that the. testimony of plaintiff differs radically from that given by him in another proceeding, and claims that the preponderance is greatly against him. While this is an argument in support of the error assigned, it is also a confession or admission that there was a dispute touching the fact, between the contending parties and their witnesses.

As to who had the preponderance of the evidence upon the record made, this was a question for the jury. It was their duty to solve the conflict and determine the truth out of it all. They were the judges of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their "testimony. They resolved it against the defendant. • The trial judge who passed upon the motion for a new trial heard these witnesses, observed their demeanor upon the stand, saw them in the act of testifying, and he, undoubtedly, was in a better position to judge this question rightly than are we. He determined appellant’s controversy against it. We, therefore, are not disposed, to take issue with the jury and the trial court upon •these disputed questions of fact.

On the issue as to what the salary was or was to be, the testimony being in sharp conflict, we cannot interfere with the disposition of that .issue made in the court below.

2‘ AGBNT^una^15 agmítfratiflcaingkenefiSpt" II. On the advancement of the $500 from plaintiff to defendant, the situation differs in that there is involved not so much a controversy of where lies the preponderance, or as to how the conflict should be settled, but on wither conceded facts are sufficient to enfitle the plaintiff to recover. It is undisputed that plaintiff deposited $500 of his money to the credit'of his employer. The [221]*221appellant concedes that the purpose of this deposit was that it should be used in paying one Tricket for delivering public addresses promotive of the development of sentiment for temperance. It is admitted that the cardinal object of the existence of defendant was to advance the adoption of an amend-ment to the Constitution, prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors. There appears in the amendment to abstract served by the appellee, not disputed by any certification of the record, as we are advised, what, in effect, amounts to evidence that officers of the association attended the meetings held by Tricket; that collections were taken up at these meetings, of which the local association or branch took half and the other half was remitted to this defendant; that both the advancement of the $500 and these remittances appeared upon the books of the defendant association; that an auditor examined these books; and that, at least on one occasion, the report of the audit was submitted to the board of defendant and was received without objection. Employing a lecturer to create public sentiment for the advancement of objects of a corporation is not an act ultrai vires. But, while the corporate body had authority to employ and pay Tricket, of course it does not follow that its secretary had power to loan it money for that purpose without its knowledge and consent; and it is probably true that he had originally no authority to use any money of the defendant’s for such purposes. It is also true that, while notice to the secretary of defendant would ordinarily be notice to it, this is not so as to this loan and its use. Knowledge by an officer of an act of his own, which he seeks to make the basis of a recovery from his employer, is not notice of such act to the latter. On the other hand, where an act done by its officer is spread upon the books of the corporation, the record will, after a reasonable time at least,, work notice, on the reasoning that, though the person spreading it there did not thereby impart notice, the managing officers would, in reasonable time, become apprised of what the books showed. But that is not very controlling. Since the defend[222]*222ant was not charged with notice of this one-sided loan at the time when it was made, it cannot be affected by the naked fact that such loan has been made. This knowledge does not enable it to undo what had been done. Notice is'never material unless the getting it creates opportunity to act effectively.

But, while one is not bound to repay an advancement merely because he is advised, after all is done, that it has been made and expended, notice thereof may be one item in the proof that some affirmative action which’ the actor was at liberty to do or not to do, and which it did with knowledge of the facts, operated as a ratification. There is one outstanding fact to which the appellant itself calls attention, the effect of which it seems to misapprehend. In an amendment to abstract filed by it, we find this statement:

“Exhibit 13 of evidence (that being a daybook of appellant), shows cash received by appellant on November 3, 1910, as follows: 1910, November 3d, cash by Dr. Batten, Marshall-town, Trieket’s meeting, $27.87.”

There* is undisputed evidence that Dr. Batten, an officer of the defendant, attended the Trieket meeting at Marshall-town, and from there .remitted to defendant half the proceeds collected. As seen, there is undisputed evidence, that this remittance was received and spread upon the books of appellant. It appears that appellant knows of it and puts it into the record here. There is no claim that it or any other like remittance was ever returned to this plaintiff, or offered. As said, the question is not what is the evidence, but what construction the law shall put upon it. Appellant insists that the Trieket venture was a financial failure.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Iowa 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-iowa-constitutional-prohibitory-amendment-assn-iowa-1916.