182 Iowa 196 | Iowa | 1917
— At an auction sale on plaintiff’s farm, defendant bought nine hogs, paying $191 for them. Subsequently, defendant represented to plaintiff that these hogs were afflicted with a disease known as hog cholera; that this disease had been communicated to other hogs owned by him; and that all of those purchased and many others had died from that disease, of the total value of about $500. After negotiating for a while, settlement of the claim asserted by defendant was made by paying him $262.50. Recovery thereof is sought on the ground that defendant’s representations were false and so known by him to be, and had for their purpose extracting money from plaintiff, and that the latter, in parting therewith, relied thereon. The evidence is in sharp conflict, and, as that in behalf of either party was ample to support a verdict in his favor, we may' not interfere with that returned.
True it is that, on re-cross-examination, he had testified that—
“The reason I gave him his money back — he told me he was going to start suit at Glenwood, and that is the county seat of Mills County. I live in Malvern, somewhere in the neighborhood of twelve miles from Glenwood, and he was going to start to bring suit down there, and I was a stranger down there, and I thought it would be a pretty bad start on me to have a lawsuit and a case of that kind, and people would think I was a pretty bad sort of a fellow to have a sale and sell sick hogs. Then, too, I couldn’t find any evidence at that time that he hadn’t lost these hogs, or but what he had lost my hogs and also lost his; and 1 felt as though, if he really did lose my hogs, I was perfectly willing to give him his money back — if he really did; because also I was tied up pretty tight and couldn’t get away very handy, and rather than have a lawsuit, I thought I better give him his money back. Q. So that is the reason you gave him the money; you didn’t believe they died with the cholera? A. I was a little bit skeptical, but I couldn’t find any reason why they didn’t. Q. You knew your hogs weren’t sick when you sold them? A. Yes, sir. Q. And hadn’t been sick? A. Yes, sir. Q. So you didn’t believe they hád died on his hands at all? A. It looked fishy to me. Q. But you thought, rather than have any further trouble, you would pay him? A. Yes. Q. And you thought, rather than have any further trouble, you would pay him, especially as you were a stranger down there,—*199 you would pay liim, and be done with it? A. Yes, sir.”
“I have had quite a bit of experience with hog cholera, and would know if the hogs were sick; but whether or not it would be cholera I don’t believe I could tell, unless a person would have a port mortem examination. I never done anything like that, but my hogs wasn’t sick at that time— no signs of cholera at that time.”
This obviates any prejudice in the ruling.
“It is not required to be shown that such representa-' tions were the sole producing cause, but it must appear that such representations were a material inducement, and that, but for such representations, the plaintiff would not have paid to the defendant the $262.50 in question.”
This pointed out the precise extent of the inducement essential, and obviated the inference of any error in the previous instruction. Appellant contends that reliance must have been had on all the representations said to have been false, and cites decisions, wherein the question was not raised, so saying. That the rule is as stated in Instruction 8 is too well established to require the citation of authority.- This disposes of the. criticism of the seventh and eighth instructions.
There was no reversible error, and the judgment is— Affirmed.