186 Iowa 904 | Iowa | 1919
The controversy involved in this case is the result of a series of transactions between the parties. The defendant A. A. Clark did business in the name of A. A. Clark & Company.
In December, 1909, plaintiff borrowed $600 of the defendant, executing a note in the sum of $600, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent. This money was used in making the initial payment upon the purchase price of certain hotel
' The court found that, on March 15, 1913, when plaintiffs executed the quitclaim deed conveying the hotel property to the defendant, they were indebted to him in the sum of $804.41, including interest, and that said settlement was obtained by fraud, and upon the representation that plaintiffs OAved the defendant $1,580; which sum included charges for usury; that there was no consideration for said deed, which, in effect, relinquished plaintiffs’’ equity of redemption in the property conveyed, other than the satisfaction of the indebtedness due from the plaintiffs to the defendant, and that the $200 paid to plaintiffs in March, 1913, represented the alleged amount received by the' defendant from the sale of the hotel in excess of the amount due from the plaintiffs, after allowing credits from the other property conveyed to the defendant in the alleged settlement of the same month; that defendant received $1,400 for the hotel property and $80 for certain lots in Council Bluffs sold by him. The court further found that the value of plaintiffs’ equity of redemption in the hotel and other property Avas $1,580, and that defendant was indebted to the plain
Upon the question of the alleged settlement, we are inclined to give weight to the finding of the trial court. The
Further discussion of the questions at issue and involved upon this appeal would be without profit. It is our conclusion that the decree and judgment of the court below must be and it is — Affirmed.