Shull v. McCrum

179 Iowa 1232
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 14, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 179 Iowa 1232 (Shull v. McCrum) 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
Shull v. McCrum, 179 Iowa 1232 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

■Salinger, J.

1. Appeal and error : ab- . stract of record : presumption. I. The appellees make the point that the appeal cannot be heard, because the abstract of appellant and the record contain no statement that same contain the evidence, because there is no certificate of any kind or character, and because it is not even shown that the case was tried by a court and jury.

We have to say: It is presumed;that the abstract contains the record. No affirmative statement that it contains the evidence, or otffier certificate, is iequired. And we think it sufficiently appears that the case was tried by a court and jury.

2. appeal and ERROR t 0X-copüons: when preserved. II. Appellees contend that the appeal cannot be heard because the defendant appellant took exceptions to neither verdict * x nor judgment. It appears that no such exception was taken, and that no motibn for new trial was made.

The general rule is that a judgment on the law side will not be reviewed in the absence of exception thereto. Sec; 3749, Code, 1897; Gillespie v. Ashford, 125 Iowa 729, 740; Redding v. Page, 52 Iowa 406; Holton v. Butler, 22 Iowa 557, at 559, 500. But if an'error which is excepted to inheres in the judgment later entered, so that there would have been no judgment had it not been for such error, then the exception need not be repeated to the final judg[1235]*1235ment in order to liave tliat judgment reviewed. Haefer v. Mullison, 90 Iowa 372; Jordan v. Kavanaugh, 63 Iowa 152; Aldrich v. Price, 57 Iowa 151, 155; Barnhart v. Farr, 55 Iowa 366; Clement v. Drybread, 108 Iowa 701.

The defendant moved for a directed verdict, on the ground that he was under no liability to plaintiffs, because there had been a complete satisfaction, accord and settlement between them. He made the same, point by instructions offered. The motion was overruled, and the instructions refused. To these rulings, there was due exception. Tf there was such accord, satisfaction and settlement, the plaintiffs were not. entitled to the judgment they asked, and which they obtained. An exception to the ruling of the court that there was no accord, satisfaction and settlement was, therefore, of necessity, an assertion that plaintiffs were not entitled to judgment. The ultimate question is one of acquiescence. Had the court held with defendant, the judgment against him was unwarranted. Therefore, when defendant complained because judgment against him was not prevented by the court, it cannot well be said that he acquiesced in the judgment, which would not have come into existence if the action to which he excepted had not been taken. Had the court ruled that there was accord, satisfaction and settlement, defendant would have no judgment to complain of now. When he complained because the court did not so rule, he complained in advance of any judgment that would be and should not have been entered had it not been for the earlier action excepted to. It follows that defendant is within the reason of the rule which makes it unnecessary to repeat an exception once taken.

3. triar: ínstruc■ject matter*-1" iyTiaweissues. The defendant excepts to Instructions i 2 and 3 because, though purporting to state the issues to the jury, they “omit entirely any reference to or statement of the issue tendered by the defendant in his an[1236]*1236swer relating to the alleged situation by accord afid satisfaction.” Unless the defendant did something which justified the omission of this issue, it was error to omit it. The omission was justified. While, as a general proposition, it was the duty of the court to submit any issue made in the answer, though no request for such submission is made, this is not so where a party tendering an issue asks the court to sustain the same as matter of law, and does not ask that it be submitted to the jury. Where he declares that there is nothing to submit, he may not complain that, notwithstanding, the court on its own motion failed to submit. In such circumstances, if there be error, it is found .in the refusal to sustain the defense as matter of law. The sole question on this head, then, is whether the court erred in refusing to hold that accord and satisfaction was established as matter of law.

2-a

4. accord and SATISFACTION I nature and requisites: Sftrat^ae-11*: EEctfo/^e. Upon whether there was accord, satisfaction and settlement as matter of law, the evidence is this: Defendant admits that he was; al a^ events, indebted to the plaintiffs in the Sl™ of 1122.15, made up of $55.15 upon a' contract which he claims was made

for services in the case of Hattie B. McCrum against this defendant, and of $67 for services due in the Busch case. After the rendition of the alleged services for which this suit is brought, services in the divorce suit of this defendant against Hattie B. McCrum, defendant wrote plaintiffs a letter, enclosing a check for $122.15 “for services.” Tire letter specifies that all except $67 “is per agreement.'”- It appears that, before this letter and check were sent, defendant was informed that he would be charged for services in the divorce action, additional to the items specified in the letter and covered by the check. Upon the check is the statement: “For services in full to date.” This check [1237]*1237arrived at plaintiffs’ office when Mr. Gill was not at home. Upon his return, Gill turned it over to a clerk, simply endorsing it. He does not remember the words on the back, and does not know whether, at the time he received it, it was as it is now. The chepk itself was before the court, and it states in the record that the phrase, “For services in full to date,” was made by a “dim pencil mark.” As soon as defendant’s letter came to Mr. Gill for notice and consid- ‘ eration, he at once wrote defendant that the amount sent was not in full of services in the divorce case, and that, notwithstanding the check, defendant was indebted for services in that case. In the due course of mail, defendant received this letter, before the bank at Cherokee, upon which the check was drawn, paid the same, and he made no effort to stop payment, though he knew, before that bank paid, of the manner in which the check was being applied by the plaintiffs. It seems very clear that defendant sent no more than was confessedly due in any event, and that the plaintiffs endorsed the check before they realized that there was claim that it paid for more than was due at all events. In view of this, and of the prompt repudiation when it was perceived that defendant claimed more, if there was accord, satisfaction and settlement, it was effected when the plaintiffs did not so intend, and did not know that they were making a settlement in full of fees for services in the divorce suit.

Under Perin v. Cathcart 115 Iowa 553, it was at least a jury question whether there had been an accord and satisfaction. Under Cartan v. Tackaberry Co., 139 Iowa 586, it was at least a jury question whether more was done than to retain what was due in any event, with an insistence that the balance be paid — which, if found by the jury, would work that no accord and satisfaction had been established. According to Jones v. Fennimore, 1 G. Greene 134, the satisfaction must have been full and complete, and it must be [1238]*1238shown that there was an acceptance in full payment of the demand. There was at least a jury question whether so much was proved. In Van Dyke v.

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Bluebook (online)
179 Iowa 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shull-v-mccrum-iowa-1917.