137 Iowa 142 | Iowa | 1908
Early in October, 1902, the defendant visited the plaintiff’s stock farm in Illinois, and there bought of him nine horses, for which he gave his note for $3,000. The horses were not to be delivered to the defendant until late in November, at which time the note became due. On the 28th of November, 1902, after this note became due, the plaintiff visited the defendant in Cedar Bapids, Iowa, and on that day the defendant executed and delivered to the plaintiff the note in suit and a chattel mortgage on the horses bought of him. There is a dispute between the parties as to the nature of the Cedar Bapids transaction, the defendant claiming that the purchase of October was then abandoned and a new contract made, and the plaintiff claiming that nothing of that kind occurred, but that the defendant then being unable to meet the note given in October, and then due, the previous obligation was renewed by giving the note in suit. There was also a dispute between the parties as to the real nature of the purchase in October. The defendant claims that the title to the stock did not then pass to him, in other words, that the contract was not executed, while the plaintiff avers that it was fully executed at that time, and that the stock remained in his possession only for the accommodation of the defendant. In his answer the defendant alleges a specific oral warranty as to the health of the horses made at both meetings, and an implied warranty that the horses were fit for breeding purposes. It is further alleged, and so appears in evidence, that at the October meeting the plaintiff orally warranted the breeding qualities of
There is nothing in the claim that the verdict is not supported by the evidence. For the errors pointed out the judgment is reversed.