35 Iowa 99 | Iowa | 1872
Several errors are assigned, but one only is urged in argument, viz., that the court erred in giving the second instruction asked by defendant, which is as follows:
“ 2. The second question arises on the construction of the contract between the parties relative to the $5,000, to be collected by plaintiffs from the stock subscriptions and tax voted at Bellevue. Under this contract you are instructed that defendants are entitled to a credit of $5,000, upon the work done, and it having been admitted by the parties that plaintiffs have received all due them upon the contract, provided defendant is entitled to the credit of $5,000, which the court instructs you to allow defendant, it follows that upon this question you must find for defendant.”
We think there is no error in this instruction to the prejudice of plaintiffs under the circumstances of the case. The plain and obvious meaning of the contract is, that plaintiffs were to receive payment for the work to be done, to the extent of $5,000, from the stock subscriptions or the tax voted in aid of the railroad upon which the work was to be performed, and that they agreed to collect and apply the amount themselves. They had a right to resort to either or both of these funds for the purpose of collecting and applying the sum of $5,000 in payment of work done
It is insisted, however, that the court erred in excluding evidence offered by plaintiffs, for the purpose of showing that, by the exercise of due diligence to collect, they would have been unable to do so. This evidence was a transcript of a judgment rendered by the district court of Jackson county, enjoining the collection of the tax voted in aid of this road, at the suit of Morris R. Brown and others against the county treasurer and township collector.
There was no error in the exclusion of this evidence. Neither the plaintiffs, the defendant nor the railroad company were parties to that proceeding, and therefore not bound thereby.
Affirmed.
Since the foregoing opinion was filed, appellants have filed a petition for a rehearing, in which it is claimed that
Affirmed.