84 Iowa 525 | Iowa | 1892
I. The following statement of the facts made by the appellant is conceded and found to be substantially correct, and, with those hereafter noticed, will be sufficient for an understanding of the questions presented:
On the thirteenth day of September, 1878, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a written contract
At the April term, 1890, of said court, the cause came on for trial; and upon the trial it very clearly appeared — in fact, both sides testified — that Clark and Ellsworth entered into the contract (Exhibit D), and that Ellsworth negotiated for Clark the purchase of the four hundred and eighty acres in Pocahontas county, under said contract, for the sum of one thousand and four dollars and fifty-two cents. It also appeared that the land was worth on the sixteenth day of August, 1884, at the time Clark conveyed the same to his son, four thousand, three hundred and twenty dollars, and that Ellsworth had not been paid any part of the profits, which would make the amount due Ellsworth the amount for which he obtained judgment. Clark, however, claimed that he sold the land to his son for two thousand, five hundred dollars, and that Ells-worth’s recovery should be figured on that basis, and during the trial offered to pay the same, with interest, which was declined. And the court rendered a judgment against Ellsworth in favor of Clark, setting aside the judgment, and canceling and setting aside the sheriff’s sale and deed, and rendering final judgment
Courts of equity have jurisdiction to grant relief against judgments obtained by fraud in cases where the fraud is not, and by the exercise of reasonable diligence would not have been, discovered by the party defrauded, until after the expiration of the time allowed in the statute for retrials. Lumpkin v. Snook, 63 Iowa, 517; McConkey v. Lamb, 71 Iowa, 636; Carrier v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 79 Iowa, 81. When the party entitled to the remedy has been prevented from' availing himself of it, during the time allowed by the statute, by the fraud or procurement of his adversary, a court of equity has power to grant him relief. Lumpkin v. Snook, supra.
Our first inquiry is, whether the plaintiff has shown himself entitled to*relief in equity. It is unnecessary that we here discuss the evidence at length. It is sufficient to say that it shows to our entire satisfaction that the appellant practiced a fraud in obtaining the judgment, by concealing an important fact bearing upon the amount he was entitled to recover, namely, that he had recommended a sale of the land for two thousand, five hundred dollars. Other circumstances, such as his failure to inform the appellee of the action,— knowing his address, — and his offer to enter an appearance, confirm us in the conclusion that the judgment was obtained by fraud. We are clear that the appellant studiously concealed from the appellee the fact- of his having obtained this judgment until after the expiration of the two years within which the appellee could apply for a retrial under section 2877 of the Code. This is shown by the fact that during that time he left the appellee to pay the taxes on the land. Had he made payment then, as he afterwards did, it would
II. “The statute however defines the remedy to which the party is entitled, — whether the action be
We think the district court erred in not ordering a retrial, and in decreeing that the judgment, levy of execution and sheriff’s deed be set aside, and title confirmed in the plaintiff, as it is only when the defense is established by a preponderance of evidence that the-appellee is entitled to that relief. The case will be-remanded for decree in conformity with this opinion-Reversed.