183 Iowa 1300 | Iowa | 1918
“I would like to be as strong physically as I believe him to be. All that can be seen is that he is easy to get into an argument and disagreeable to get along with, the same as when he was a boy and young man, and the same as his father was,” — thereby intending to charge, and charging, that the plaintiff falsely, and by the use of fraudulent evidence as to his mental and nervous condition, obtained and was receiving a pension from the government, and for the purposes of having it understood and believed that plaintiff had fraudulently obtained a pension, and was fraudulently cheating the government of the United States out of money paid to him under the pension certificate. It is further alleged that the statements so made were untrue, and known by the defendant to be untrue. Plaintiff further alleged that he was obliged to carry on correspondence with the government and with other parties, and to make trips to distant cities, at great expense, to disprove defendant’s statements, and that he was denied the credit which he had received and was able to obtain on account of the pension, and he was scandalized and humiliated before the community in which he lived, and provoked to wrath.
Upon the filing of this amended and substituted petition, the defendant moved to strike it from the records, on the ground that it was simply a repetition of the allegations of the petition to which the demurrer had been sustained. The court sustained this motion. The plaintiff elected to stand .on his pleadings, and his petition Avas dismissed. From this he appeals.
Due exceptions were taken to the ruling on the demurrer, and exceptions also preserved to the action of the court in striking the amended and substituted petition.
The matters complained of in the second count of the petition, if believed to be true, would lead the mind to the conclusion that the plaintiff, knowing he had suffered no disability while in the service of his country in the Spanish-American War, had fraudulently procured a pension from the government for disabilities not sustained, — clearly charging the plaintiff with defrauding the government, and Avith obtaining property by false pretenses, a cxdminal offense which lays the foundation of a civil action, if unfounded, untrue, and maliciously made.
As said in SheiMey v. Ashton, 130 Iowa 195:
“We should not indulge in any critical refinements to discover the intent of the writer, nor too carefully scan the language to see if there is not some technical view which will sustain the defendant’s contention. Ordinarily, minds do not critically analyze and scan such publication. They give them their natural and ordinary signification; and to such interpretation we think this defendant should be held.”