Scott v. Wilson

137 N.W. 1043, 157 Iowa 31
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 24, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 137 N.W. 1043 (Scott v. Wilson) 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
Scott v. Wilson, 137 N.W. 1043, 157 Iowa 31 (iowa 1912).

Opinion

Evans, J.

— The action was before us upon a former •appeal. Scott v. Wilson, 150 Iowa 202. On that appeal, however, only the sufficiency of the allegations of the petition was involved; the case being tried as on a demurrer to the petition. After remand of the case, plaintiff filed a substituted petition, and upon issue made the case went to trial. The undisputed facts appearing in the present record differ so materially from those presented by the former record that we can not say that our opinion on the former appe'al controls the result on this appeal, as will appear in our ■ later discussion.

On November 18, 1908, the plaintiff bought of the defendant an eighty-acre farm for an agreed consideration of $4,200. A written contract was entered into, known in the record as “Exhibit A.” Such contract contained the following provisions:

And the said party of the second part in consideration of the premises hereby agrees and with the party of the first part to purchase all his right, title and interest in and to the real estate above described, for the sum of forty-two hundred and no-100 dollars and to pay said sum therefor to the party of the first part, his heirs or assigns, as follows: One hundred and no-100 dollars on the execution of the agreement, and the balance of - dollars as follows, to wit: Nine hundred dollars when warranty deed to said land and abstract of title thereto showing a clear and perfect record title to said land is delivered to Erist National Bank, Adel, Iowa, in escrow for delivery to the party of the second part, March 1, 1909. Thirty-two hundred dollars March 1, 1909, when said abstract and [33]*33deed are delivered to said second party, with interest from March 1, 1909, at the rate of six percent per annum on all such sums as shall remain unpaid, payable gnnually, till all is paid. And party of the second part shall also annually pay all taxes and assessments that may accrue on said property as they become due or before they become delinquent, not including the taxes for the year 1908, which party of the first part is to pay.

At the time this contract was entered into, it appears without dispute that certain proceedings to establish a drainage district had been commenced, including this land. No work had been done upon the proposed improvement; but the commissioner had filed his report, together with an estimate of benefits to be. assessed, including approximately $500, against Wilson’s land; and such assessment had been entered upon the records against Wilson and his land. This assessment was made to appear upon Wilson’s abstract as an incumbrance when the abstract was delivered to Scott in pursuance of the contract. A dispute arose over the construction of the contract, and this resulted in another contract, known in the record as “Exhibit B,” which was entered into December 2, 1908, and was as follows:

Whereas a controversy has this day arose between the parties to the within contract as to which of said parties shall pay the tax and costs of construction of ditch No. Six (6), Washington township, Dallas county, Iowa, and assessed and to be assessed and levied on the south half of the southeast quarter (]4) of section II — 80—28 in said county described on the within. It is hereby agreed by and between said parties that said second party shall retain in his hands out of his payment of March 1, 1909, an amount of money sufficient to pay the amount of taxes assessed and levied on said land for said drainage purposes, and said sum deposited in the First National Bank at Adel, Iowa, the amount so retained to pay such taxes when due and payable, and if the court shall finally determine said land is not liable for said costs and taxes, said sum of money so retained for said purpose by said party shall be paid to said first party, on the order of the first party [34]*34therefor. This memorandum of agreement is made as additional to a certain written contract between said parties named herein, dated November 18, 1908, and made a part hereof.

In February, 1909, a slight addition was made to the assessment against the land, leaving it still within $500. Such was the condition of the record on March 1, 1909,. on which date the plaintiff accepted the abstract of title and a warranty deed and remitted to Wilson the 'balance of the purchase money, less $500. By subsequent proceedings, the exact nature of which do not very clearly appear, an assessment of $1,292 was made against the land and against plaintiff, Scott, as the owner thereof. The plaintiff sues to recover of the defendant the difference between such sum and the sum of $500 already retained. The parties having acted upon the contract, Exhibit B, and, the plaintiff having remitted to defendant the sum of $2,700 as a balance due, he sues to recover back $800 thereof as having been paid by mutual mistake. The contention of defendant is that by the contract, Exhibit B, he only undertook to pay the proposed assessment then appearing upon the record against the land, and that both parties so construed the contract and acted upon such construction. He contends,, also, that the alleged mutual mistake, if any, under which plaintiff claims to have paid the final payment existed at the time the contract, Exhibit B, was entered into. The mutual mistake consisted of the mutual belief of both parties that the assessment was approximately $500. This was the belief of the parties when the contract was entered into, and the defendant contends that he would not have entered into the contract except upon such understanding.

[35]*35Contracts* parol evidence: admissibility. One of these pleaded the contract as oral. All of them pleaded the ■ contract as partly written and partly oral. In. support of his petition, % J . . . , 5 , . . ’ the plaintiff introduced oral evidence of all-the negotiations between the parties leading up to the contract, Exhibit B. The defendant introduced considerable testimony of -like character without objection. At a later stage of defendant’s evidence, plaintiff began to interpose objections to the competency of the evidence. It is sufficient to say that the evidence thus objected to was responsive to the oral evidence introduced by plaintiff, and he was thereby precluded from objecting thereto. [34]*34I. Considerable oral evidence was received 'by the trial court over the objection.of the plaintiff. We need not deal with these objections in detail. The substituted petition of the plaintiff set up his cause of action in four counts.

[35]*35It is also true that the provisions of the written contract are such that some intrinsic facts were necessary to be shown, in order to enable the court to construe the contract and to apply the same. The line was not very closely drawn between the evidence of such facts and the evidence of oral negotiations leading up to the contract but this line had been lost long before the plaintiff made his objections, and before he had closed his own case. It is to be noted, further, that what was said and done by the parties after the execution of the contract, Exhibit B, was clearly com.petent, so far as it bore upon the performance of the contract and upon the construction which the parties put upon it. Upon the record before us, we must hold, therefore, that the appellant has no grievance because of the admission of oral evidence.

2* Same: construction: sale of real property: payment II.

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137 N.W. 1043, 157 Iowa 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-wilson-iowa-1912.