6 Iowa 476 | Iowa | 1858
— It is not within the limits of legal supposition, that the court should order a non-suit, after a verdict for the defendant; and therefore, considering the testimony of the bill of exceptions, and the, other circumstances concurring with it, we incline to regard the entry relating to the verdict, as an error of the clerk, and will view the case accordingly.
It was erroneous to direct the non-suit. There was much for the jury to inquire into, although the bill of sale should be inadmissible. It does not appear why this instrument was rejected. It may have been because the justice does not certify of what county he is an official, as is indicated in plaintiff’s argument-; or it may have been because the
It woirld seem that the court proceeded upon the ground, that if the bill of sale was such that it was inadmissible as evidence, then there was no valid sale. But, as we have seen, a sale without a written instrument, would be good, if the vendor did not remain in actual, possession; and also, the instrument of sale would be good, notwithstanding a defective acknowledgment, if the creditor had notice of the sale. And in either of these cases, the paper would be admissible as evidence of a sale.
The case should have been permitted to go to the jury upon the facts, the court instructing upon the law as they deemed right. If the trial by the jury proceeded until they returned a verdict, still there was error in rejecting
The judgment is reversed, and a procedendo awarded.