190 Iowa 343 | Iowa | 1920
Assuming that these so hold, and that, therefore, the deduction is sound, yet the question remains whether the premise can be maintained. Was there such an allegation? Appellant says there was not. It concedes the petition has a general statement that Bepp “is an agent of said State Serum & Supply Company, and receives a commission and profit for the virus and serum that he uses and buys of said company;” and that there is an allegation that Bepp is a resident of Dallas County, and that his principal place of business is in that county. But it points out, and we think it true, there is no allegation that defendant maintained any such office or agency, or that the action grew out of or was connected with the business of any office or agency of defendant company in Dallas County. Appellant could not waive the right to be tried in the proper county by a failure to deny what was not alleged. Moreover, the motion to transfer was not made until plaintiff had offered evidence, and in that evidence he himself showed that Bepp was authorized to make whatever profit he saw fit on the sale of the defendant’s product; that he can make either nothing or charge whatever he wished to; that:
“There is not a single agency of the company or a representative thereof as an agency outside of the direct employees of the plant itself, including myself (the witness) and Mr. Cunningham. Dr. Bepp is not in any way or in any manner connected either with the State Serum & Supply Company, as an agent; he has no authority as a representative of the company in any manner, way, or character whatever; he pays for serum the same as any other veterinarian; he runs no account, and buys C. O. D. on every dollar.”
Evidently the plaintiff thought the question of agency was in issue. And in an undisputed affidavit, attached to the motion for change, it is stated that the defendant company “never had any office, place of business, or agency within the state of Iowa, other than its principal place of business at Des Moines.” On
1-a
We conclude the motion to change the place of trial to Polk County should have been sustained.
“The court now rules that, whatever merit the last motion would have if presented at the time when the case was dismissed as to Repp, defendant having permitted the case to proceed to trial after such dismissal, the court thinks the action is not timely, and the motion is, therefore, overruled.”
We are unable to sustain this conclusion. In the first place, the motion for change of place of trial was in part grounded upon the fact that the case against Repp had been dismissed. True, the relief asked was a change of place of trial, and not a dismissal: in other words, defendant asked less than it perhaps was entitled to. None the less, it had signified to the court that, because of the dismissal, it contended it could no longer rightfully be held, in Dallas County. The court ruled that, although the suit had.been dismissed against the resident, the venue could not be changed. This ruled that the defendant must remain where it was. Every moment after that ruling, it was erroneously held in Dallas County: First, because it never should have been impleaded there; and, second, because there had been a dismissal against Repp. About all that it might have done which it did not do, was to remove itself and its counsel physically from the court room. It did not waive the lack of jurisdiction by failing to flee physically. It had protested against being retained, and had assigned its reason, taken its exceptions, and all knew that the subsequent trial was not of its own volition, and was not acquiesced in. There was no waiver. Without waiver, the motion to dismiss was confessedly well taken, after plaintiff had dismissed as to Repp. After
Our final conclusion is that the motion for change of venue should have been sustained; that the motion to dismiss should also have been sustained; and that nothing appearing in the record has estopped appellant to complain of the error committed in overruling either of said motions. It follows the judgment below must be — Reversed.