91 Iowa 727 | Iowa | 1894
-The plaintiff is the owner of a half-section farm in Hancock county. He leased said land to the defendant for the year 1890 for one-third of the crops raised, as rent. The defendant farmed the land for the year 1891, but refused to deliver any share of the grain grown on one quarter section, on the ground, that, in October, 1890, he bought that part •of the farm of the plaintiff, and was in possession thereof in 1891 as owner, and not as tenant. The plaintiff commenced on action of forcible detainer to obtain possession of the land. A trial was had, and the plaintiff was defeated, and he appealed the ease to the district court. He also commenced this action in the district court to recover the rent of said quarter section for the year 1891. The defendant answered by setting up a contract of purchase, and alleged that he had tendered and offered to pay for said land according to the terms of the contract, and demanded that a decree be entered ordering plaintiff to convey the land to him upon the payment of the purchase money according to the contract. By agreement •of the parties, the action of forcible detainer and the action for rent were •consolidated, and heard as a suit in equity. Before the hearing was com
The evidence shows that the contract as made by the parties when the one hundred dollars earnest or forfeit money was paid, was that the-defendant should pay two thousand and seven hundred dollars for the-land, as follows: One hundred dollars cash; two hundred dollars January 1, 1891; and the balance in payments to be arranged when the payment of two hundred dollars was made. It further appears, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that an arrangement was afterward made, by which defendant was to have the option of paying two thousand and five hundred dollars for the land in cash or take it at two thousand and seven hundred dollars with deferred payments. There was a mortgage-on the land, and when the time came to close up the transaction the plaintiff and J. H. Reese procured a release of the mortgage, to be deposited in a bank at Ackley, so that, if the defendant desired to pay the cash for the land, he could have a clear title. But when the parties met to-arrange the matter, the defendant did not make a tender of either the two hundred dollar payment, or of the whole amount of the purchase money. He admits in his testimony, as a witness, that he had no money to tender. The only claim he makes is that he had arranged with parties to furnish him the money. He named the persons who were to furnish it. One of these persons testified that he had a long talk with Walters about, furnishing him the two hundred dollars before January 1, 1890, and some time in March, 1891, he concluded to let him have that amount' if he would give security for it. Another person, from whom he claims he could have borrowed the whole amount, testified, as a witness, that he
It appears from the defendant’s testimony, as a witness, that he raised on the land in controversy, in the year 1891, one thousand, one hundred and twenty-five bushels of oats, one hundred and fifty-seven bushels of barley, and seventy acres of corn, which produced from thirty to forty bushels to the acre, and a few bushels of flax seed. There is no ■evidence as to the value of the flax seed, and no satisfactory evidence of the quantity or value of the hay cut on the land. Computing the corn at thirty-five bushels per acre, and the price of all the grain at the lowest market price shown by the evidence, we find that the plaintiff should have judgment against the defendant for three hundred and twenty •dollars, .with interest from January 1, 1892, and that there should be a ■decree for the plaintiff for the possession of the land. It appears that an •attachment was issued at the commencement of the suit. The decree dismissing the plaintiff's petition is reversed, and the cause is remanded ■to the court below for a judgment and a decree in accord with this ■opinion. Reversed.