139 Iowa 7 | Iowa | 1908
On January 20, 1906, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract by tbe terms of which defendant granted to plaintiff upon certain terms and conditions the right to sell its Rambler motor carriages in the city of Cedar Rapids and other .described territory in the State of Iowa, and to refer to the plaintiff all inquiries received from said territory for automobiles of its manufacture. The first count of the petition alleges that defendant in violation of this agreement sold one or more automobiles to customers residing within said prescribed territory, and refused to pay or account to plaintiff therefor. It was also alleged that the contract was made under representations by defendant that it would produce several new styles or models of the Rambler machine for the year 1906, which promise and representation it failed to perform.
By the second count of the petition it is alleged that acting under a provision of the contract which requires an advance payment or deposit of $25 with each order for machines, plaintiff deposited with defendant the aggregate sum of $625, and that under another paragraph of said contract giving either party the right to terminate the same upon the failure of the other to observe or perform its conditions the plaintiff has elected to put an end thereto on account of the defendant’s violation of its terms as set forth in the first count, and judgment is demanded for the amount of said deposit. The defendant admits the m airing of the contract, and admits that it has received payment or deposit from the plaintiff to the amount of $625, on orders for the purchase of twenty-five automobiles. It denies, however, that it has in any manner violated the terms of the contract. Defendant also pleads by way of counterclaim that plaintiff is indebted to it for automobile supplies and repairs furnished to the amount of $113.19, and for freight paid on plaintiff’s account $58.90, for which sum it asks judgment against plaintiff. In reply plaintiff alleges that the automobile supplies and repairs furnished by the defendant have
Pending the trial defendant dismissed its counterclaim for freight, and as the record seems to show, though this is disputed in argument, plaintiff conceded its liability to defendant for supplies to the amount of $44.26. At the close of the testimony the court ruled that plaintiff had failed to make a case for the jury and directed a verdict for the defendant upon its counterclaim in the sum of $44.26.
In plaintiff’s reply argument it is ingeniously suggested that the contract calls for a deposit of only $25 with each order for carriages, and as there was but a single order for the twenty-five carriages a deposit of $25 only was required, and plaintiff is therefore entitled to demand a return of at least $600. Assuming for sake of argument only that this is a fair interpretation of the contract it simply shows that plaintiff chose to make a larger advance payment than it had agreed to make; but even if this be true we see no reason why the elementary rule just referred to is not still applicable. The pai’ties evidently construed their agreement as requiring a deposit of $25 for each carriage ordered, and having voluntarily made payment on that basis plaintiff is in no position to demand its recovery without a showing of some failure of defendant to perform its contract obligation.' Of this there is no evidence.
As there is some question whether the counterclaim of $44.26 allowed by the trial court was admitted by plaintiff on the trial, and the appellee offers in this court to remit the