135 Iowa 733 | Iowa | 1907
The defendant-was the owner of land in Stark county, Ill., described as the W. % of the N. E. % of section No. 1, and the S. % of the S. E. % of the N. W. % of section No. 1, and another tract of land described by meets and bounds; the entire tract being supposed to contain one hundred and sixteen acres. He negotiated a sale of this land to the plaintiffs through a land agent; the price to be paid therefor being the sum of $8,120, which would be at the rate of $70 per acre. At the time the contract was entered into the defendant’s wife was visiting in California, and the deed conveying the land to the plaintiff was executed by the defendant, and forwarded to California, to be executed by his wife, and thereafter the deed was returned to the defendant. The deed states that the land conveyed amounted to one hundred and sixteen acres, more or less. Before the transaction was closed by
The certificate attached to “ Exhibit 2 ” certified that Pedfield was the custodian of the files and records of the county of Stark, pertaining to surveys, titles, records of deeds, etc., and that the plat which it accompanies was a true copy of the government survey and plat of the N. % of section- 1 in township No. 13 N., range 6 E. of the fourth P. M., in the county of Stark and State of Illinois, and that according to the government survey the W. % of said N. E. 1*4 of section 1 contained seventy-five and fifty one hundredths acres, that the E. % of said N. W. % of section 1 contained seventy-two and sixty one hundredths, and that the S. E. % of said N. W. % of section 1 contained forty acres, as the same appeared from the records in his office. The appellant’s principal objection to the introduction of the exhibit is that the plat itself showed, as well as the certificate attached thereto, that the W. % of the N. E. % contained seventy-five and fifty one hundredths acres, and
It is finally said that a new trial should have been granted the plaintiff because of the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. While the evidence is somewhat meager as to the actual number of acres which the plaintiff received by his conveyance, it cannot be said, as a
The verdict and judgment should stand, and the case •is therefore affirmed.