78 Iowa 531 | Iowa | 1889
I. Two actions were commenced by the plaintiff against the defendant for false representations as to the location of two tracts of land. The
“(1) Did the defendant Wilder, just prior to the purchase of the west half of block 52, Rustin & Co.’s addition, by plaintiff, make to plaintiff’s husband, while he was acting as her agent, the representations and statements which plaintiff in her petition says defendant did make to him ? Answer. Yes. (2) Did defendant, prior to the purchase of the west half of said block 52, make to the plaintiff herself the statements and representations which she avers in her petition he did make to her ? A. Yes. (3) Did defendant Wilder, just before the purchase of said block 52 by plaintiff, designate a corner as the corner of said block 52, and did he designate a tract as block 52, which corner and tract were not the true corner and block? A. Yes. (4) If he did make the statements and representations as claimed by plaintiff, and designate the corner and tract as claimed by her, then were such representations, statements and designations false ? and did he then know them to be false ? A. Yes. (5) If defendant made the representations, statements and designations as plaintiff claims, then did plaintiff believe the same to be true ? and, second, if she did so believe, did she rely upon the same, and by reason thereof purchase the west half of block 52 ? A. Yes. (6) If the defendant made the statements and representations, and designated the corner and tract, as plaintiff claims, then could the plaintiff, by herself and husband, by the exercise of
“C. H. Milveestjsd, Foreman.”
It will be observed by the answers to the interrogatories that the jury found for the plaintiff upon every fact essential to a recovery on the ground of fraud, except that, in answer to the sixth question, it was found that the plaintiff or her husband, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, could _have ascertained the truth with respect to the false .representations. This findmg of the jury was doubtless based upon an instruction of the court which, upon the question of reasonable diligence, was as follows: “If the defendant made the representations, statements and designations as to corner and tract of block as by the plaintiff in her petition alleged, and the same were false,- and if the plaintiff had ready means of information as to the facts with reference thereto, or by reasonable diligence could have obtained the same, it was her duty to have done so, and not have relied upon the statements of defendant; and if she had such means of information, and failed to exercise and use the same, and wholly relied upon defendant’s statements, representations and designation, and by reason thereof made the purchase, and was damaged, still she cannot recover.”
The only real question in the case is whether there were any facts attending the transaction complained of which warranted the giving of this instruction, and whether the jury were authorized, from the evidence, in finding, in effect, that the plaintiff could not recover because she did not exercise reasonable diligence to ascertain the facts as to the location of the land. It appears from the evidence that the defendant was at
We are united in the conclusion that the evidence did not authorize the instruction to the jury which we have been considering, and that interrogatory number 6 ought not to have been submitted to the jury, and that the answer thereto finds no support in the undisputed facts of the case. As the answers to the other interrogations require a general verdict for the plaintiff, the court erred in overruling amotion made by the plaintiff for a judgment on the special findings notwithstanding the general verdict. The cause is reversed, and remanded to the court below, with directions to render a judgment for the plaintiff for three hundred dollars, with interest at six per cent, from the seventh day of September, *1888.
Reversed and remanded.