14 Iowa 112 | Iowa | 1862
So far as the assignment of errors refers to the instructions of the court given upon its own motion, and at the instance of defendants, we think it unimportant to consider. The verdict of the jury upon the issues made by the pleadings was in favor of plaintiff, so that if there was, error in this ruling of the court it was without prejudice to plaintiff. The questions properly presented are, whether under the pleadings and evidence the jury could find as they did for the defendant as to the one hundred dollars’ worth of goods, and whether the court had the power to modify as it did the verdict for the jury and render judgment thereon.
We think there is no evidence to justify this verdict. The only testimony upon this branch of the case is, that the mortgage was given to plaintiff “perhaps one hundred dollars of new stock in store consisting of periodicals, that they were under the counter at the time of the replevin, that Moore, the plaintiff, got none of the periodicals on his replevin, that they were never taken from the store and Moore and his attorney never claimed any; he also stated that the periodicals not replevied were of little value.”
The plaintiff did not by his pleading claim any of the property of the said Stowes, except such as was in the store at the time the mortgage was executed. The one hundred dollars’ worth of periodicals were purchased after the mortgage was given, and were therefore not claimed by the plaintiff.
The jury did not find that the one hundred dollars’ worth of periodicals were wrongfully taken by plaintiff, that the defendants were entitled to the possession thereof and that the value of such property was one hundred dollars. This is the substance of the verdict as put into form by the order of the court. The jury without doubt refer to the one hundred dollars’ worth of property incidentally, notas fixing the1 value thereof, but as identifying the property that plaintiff should not recover for.
Without any claim upon the part of plaintiff for this particular property, and without any evidence showing a taking or detention by him, or any value fixed upon said property at the date of the replevin, we are unable to see how the court could properly render the judgment it did upon the verdict. As to the power of the court to put verdict in form, see Fromme v. Jones, 13 Iowa, 474.
Reversed.