67 Iowa 164 | Iowa | 1885
The contract sued on is in these words :
“ In consideration of the following goods, viz., eleven large state maps and eleven geographies, bought by us of Mills & Co., we agree to pay them at Des Moines; Iowa, one hundred and ten dollars on or before the first day of May, 1881, provided a majority of the following-named persons, John Ryan, T. J. Cowman, Andrew Collins, J. G. Cowman, John Hayes, ¥m. Danley, Thos. Kane, John Owens, J. E. Eleck, Ed. Churchill, John Worley, shall sign this agreement. Nevertheless, the issuance and delivery to Mills & Co. on or before the first day of May, 1881, a valid school order of the district township of Des Moines, Jasper county, Iowa, for said amount, payable as above, shall be received by them in full payment thereof. “ Andrew Collins.
[Signed] . “ J. E. Eleck.
“ J. Gr. Cowman.
“T. J..Cowman.
“John Owens.
“ Wm. Danley.
“Ed. Churchill.”
The defendants, for answer, averred “ that they were, at the time the contract set out in said petition is claimed to have been executed, and now are, members of the school board in and for Des Moines township, Jasper county, Iowa, and John Ryan was and now is president of said board; that the signatures of Andrew Collins and T. J. Cowman to said contract were obtained on the condition and representation by plaintiffs that said John Ryan, president of said board, had agreed to and would sign said contract; and, relying, on said condition and.representation, they, the last named defendants, signed said contract; that the signatures of John Owens, J. G. Cowman and J. E. Eleck to said contract were obtained
The plaintiffs demurred to the answer, “(1) because the facts pleaded -therein as a d'efense constitute no legal defense to the action; (2) because the ■ suit is brought on a printed and written instrument admitted to be signed by the defendants, which is plain and specific in its terms, and the facts set forth in the answef are not such as to defeat the liability of the-makers of said'contract.”
Taking the allegations of the answer to be true, we think that Collins and Cowman were drawn hy the plaintiffs into a contract which they had reason to believe that the district would assume, and that belief was grounded in part, at least, upon a false and fraudulent statement made by the plaintiffs to induce the contract.
Having reached this conclusion, it is not necessary to consider the other questions. If Collins and T. J. Cowman are not holden, the other defendants are not; for without the former the contract would not be signed by a majority, and, according to its own terms, would bind no one. We think that the demurrer was properly overruled.
Affirmed.