136 Iowa 225 | Iowa | 1907
As verdict was directed, however, we are concerned only in ascertaining whether there was affirmative evidence tending to support the charge of deceit. It turned out that the Coon river runs through the farm a distance of sixty-five or seventy rods, and also that a highway extended through it from north to south; that but fifteen or twenty-two acres in patches were in cultivation; that the river bank is high, and a portion of the land hilly, some of it a hundred feet above the river. The witnesses of plaintiff estimated the value of the land at $25 to $30, and those of the defendants from $40 to $45 per acre, except one, who placed it from $40 to $60. So that the jury might have found: (1) That the value of the land was asserted to be $60 per acre as a fact, and not as of opinion, and the character of the land was described; (2) that the land was worth at least $20 per acre less, and was not of the character represented; (3) that plaintiff in exchanging relied upon the representations made, and was. deceived thereby to her damage. The only doubt is as to whether the evidence was such that the jury might have found that the representations, when m'ade, if at all, were known to be false and made with intent to deceive. In view of what might have been regarded as a scheme to prevent plaintiff from examining the land, the assurance of Walsh that she could trust him, his testimony that he had never seen the land, that he knew that a part of it was rough with
Some other points are argued which may be disposed. by adverting to the fact that the 'contract was one for the exchange of properties, and that plaintiff could have been _ damaged no more than the difference, if any, between the áctual market Value of the land, and that of the stock of millinery as it was and good will, if included.— Reversed.