18 Iowa 256 | Iowa | 1865
The defendants asked the court to instruct the jury that, “ if any person, being in the lawful possession, sells the personal property of another without authority, and the owner subsequently, and with knowledge of all the circumstances of the sale, acquiesces in, and ratifies it, although but for a short time, he becomes thereby bound by the sale, and cannot afterwards repudiate it to suit his convenience.” This instruction, with others of like import, was refused, and such refusal is assigned as error.
Our statute (Rev., § 3068) provides that depositions, which have been read in evidence even, shall not be taken by the jury to their room. If such depositions were, how
There was no error in giving the third and sixth instructions by the court. The first instruction asked by defendants and refused, while it may be based on a correct legal principle, is so unguarded in its phraseology as to justify its refusal. The other instructions asked by defendants embraced, in substance, the same general rule as the one noticed under the first point of this opinion, and should have been given.
Reversed.