98 Iowa 510 | Iowa | 1896
On the thirtieth day of March, 1887, the plaintiffs, John Erushaand Frances, his wife, made and delivered to Charles Tomash their promissory note, in writing, for the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars, with interest, payable two years after its date. Tomash died-' on the twelfth day of February, 1892. The defendant was appointed administrator of his estate, and qualified and is acting as such. It is claimed by the plaintiffs that, prior to the death of Tomash, several payments were made and indorsed on the note. After his death, the note passed into the possession of the defendant, and on the twenty-fifth day of February, 1892, the plaintiffs paid to him, as the balance due on it, the sum of two thousand seven hundred and thirty-one dollars. They claim that, by mistake, they paid three hundred and twenty-two dollars and fifty cents more than the amount really due, and ask that an order to repay to them that sum be made. If the indorsements of payments made on the note are correct, then it appears that the claims of the plaintiffs are well founded. But some of the indorsements which purport to have been made before the death of Tomash were not in his handwriting, and the controversy is. in regard to the sums of money paid to him.