11 Iowa 513 | Iowa | 1861
The complainants by their bill seek the foreclosure of a mortgage given to secure the payment of two promissory notes. The defendants in their answer claim that the notes were obtained by fraud, deceit, &c., and without any valuable considerationand set out specifically the manner in which they were obtained. The defendants craved a trial by jury, first, upon the question of fraud, and second upon the question of consideration. The court submicted to the jury the following issue, yiz : Were the notes and the mortgage, which are sued on in this case, obtained from defendants by fraud ?
Upon this issue, under the evidence, the jury found affirmatively, and judgment was rendered accordingly, and from this the plaintiffs appeal.
The portion of the record which purported to contain the evidence introduced before the jury, was, upon motion at the last term of this court, stricken from the files, the same not having been properly certified.
The only point now relied upon by the appellants, is that ihe issue presented by the chancellor to the jury, was broader than the one made by the pleadings.
The chancellor has the power to direct any question of
The appellants rely upon the ease of Brink v. Morton, 2 Iowa 416, as supporting their assignment of error. It is true that this court found that the court in that case had presented to the jury a much broader issue than that made by the pleadings. But we think that the cases are not analagous; nor do we think the court would have interfered with the finding in that case, had not all the evidence that was introduced before the jury been before this court.
Judgment affirmed.