182 Iowa 431 | Iowa | 1918
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2-b
The appellee claims he suffered further actual damages because both he and the defendants knew, when he gave his notes, that, if his employer was garnisheed, the plaintiff would be discharged from his employment; that being garnisheed caused the employer to discharge the plaintiff; that, though diligent in seeking other employment, he was unable to obtain it to any considerable extent; and that so, a further actual loss occurred. It suffices to say as to this that the record affirmatively shows plaintiff was not discharged because of the service of the garnishee process, but because he had made an assignment of his wages as security for the loan evidenced by his notes.
The same complaint is lodged against Instruction 10, and the further one that it allows the consideration of matters as actual damages which are too remote, and are not the proximate result of an act by the defendants, but the result of an independent act by persons whose acts do not bind the defendants. The instruction charges that, if it appears that the money garnished was exempt, and that, in selling the notes, the buyer was actuated with intent, etc.. then plaintiff will be entitled to recover such actual damages as have been suffered by him, not to exceed $47, the amount seized on the process. We think the objection is not Avell made.
As we view them, none of the authorities -presented by appellant condemn these instructions. In Brown v. Allen, 35 Iowa 306, 311 (trespass for removing a quantity of corn), we held faulty an instruction that, if entry and detention be unlawful, the law will presume that these were wilful and malicious. Imnan v. Ball, 65 Iowa 543, 546 (conversion of goods), reviewed an instruction stating that, if one knows an act is wrongful, then such act is, as matter of laiv, wilful and malicious. It is held that exemplary damages may only be had for a wilful or malicious wrong, an act done with purpose or intent to harass, oppress, or injure, and that the instruction in review made a finding of malice possible where there had been nothing but a mere mistake or blunder. Curl v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 63 Iowa 417, reverses for an instruction that the wilful use of
Y. It is complained the court failed to set aside the verdict of the jury against the defendant Edwin D. Baith, after the action against him had been dismissed by the plaintiff, and erred in rendering judgment against said Baith upon such verdict. We find no judgment against anybody in the record, and this appeal would have been dismissed for want of jurisdiction, if the notice of appeal, after reciting an appeal from the judgment, had not also set forth that appeal was taken from the overruling of the motion for new trial. Neither do we find that any verdict went against Baith. The only verdict submitted was one finding for the plaintiff, without naming any defendant, and another, finding for the defendant M. S. Welker & Co. The complaint does not seem to be well founded. •
For the error in overruling the complaint, in the motion for new trial, that the verdict was excessive, the judgment must be — Reversed and remanded.
If appellee will remit all but the actual damages, the judgment will stand affirmed at the cost of appellant, if election be made within 30 days from the filing of this opinion.