90 Iowa 356 | Iowa | 1894
I. The Citizens’ Bank, defendant, is located at Story City, and is owned by the defendants Tjernagel and Swan. In 1891 the plaintiff was •engaged in the hardware business at a village named Roland, a few miles from Story City, and he did his banking business with said bank. He claims that he delivered to the defendant Tjernagel the sum of two hundred dollars in currency, at Roland, to be deposited in the bank, and that he received no credit for said money. There is no question made as to the sufficiency •of the evidence to authorize a verdict for plaintiff.
II. When the plaintiff commenced the action he sued out a writ of attachment on the ground that the defendant- Tjernagel was about to remove permanently- out of the county, and had property not exempt from execution, which he refused to apply to the payment or securing of the debt due to the plaintiff, and that he was about to convert his property into money for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of his creditors. The attachment was levied upon eighty acres of land. The defendant Tjernagel filed a counterclaim, in which he demanded damages of the
III. The defendants filed affidavits which tended to show that plaintiff’s counsel, in his argument to the-jury, made false statements, which were not warranted by the evidence and which were greatly to the prejudice of the defendants. A new trial was asked on. account of this misconduct. We think the court rightly overruled the motion on this ground. It does not. appear that these affidavits were made part of the bill of exceptions. Where misconduct of an attorney in argument is relied on for reversal on appeal, it should be shown by bill of exceptions, and not by affidavits filed in the trial court. Rayburn v. Railway Co., 74 Iowa, 637, 35 N. W. Rep. 606, and 38 N. W. Rep. 520; Hall v. Carter, 74 Iowa, 364, 37 N. W. Rep. 956; Fowler v. Town of Strawberry Hill, 74 Iowa, 644, 38 N. W. Rep. 521.
IV. A new trial was asked upon the ground off newly discovered evidence, which was supported by affidavits. The affidavits as to alleged newly discovered evidence were, for the most part, contradicted by counter affidavits filed by the plaintiff. Much of the-newly discovered evidence was cumulative, and, in our