197 Iowa 195 | Iowa | 1924
A statement of the facts which are established, or . claimed, to^ be established, by the evidence, and the 'claims of the .parties, will be necessary to make plain the .questions presented on this appeal.
Appellee by his answer admitted the execution of the note, but set up in defense an alleged oral agreement whereby appellant, in consideration of the cancellation of the contract of purchase of the farm, agreed to cancel and return all notes find claims owed by appellee to appellant in connection with the purchase of the land, and to pay appellee for improvements put upon the farm by him; and in a.counterclaim he sought to re-, cover the alleged cost of such improvements. Appellant’s reply to the answer and counterclaim was a general denial.
There was testimony tending to establish the allegations of the answer and counterclaim, and to the effect that,-about May 1, 1921, the appellant came to the field where appellee was working, and asked him to sign a release of the contract of purchase, and said that, if he would do so, he (appellant) would release “the contracts and everything,” “release all these contracts and notes that he had signed,” and pay for the improvements appel-lee had put on the farm; that appellant- produced a paper, a contract, with appellee’s signature on it, and wrote something on it which appellee signed. The testimony of appellee as to this transaction was corroborated by his farm hand, who claimed to have been present and to have heard part of the conversation.
Appellant, as a witness, denied making any agreement to cancel or surrender the note in question or to pay for the improvements. He contends, further, that any promise to cancel or surrender the note or pay for improvements, as claimed by
“The drop in live stock and grain has left Smith about four thousand worse off than nothing. He will have to be released from the contract on the farm and have it rented to him for grain rent, or he will have to go into bankruptcy and get a new start. We believe if you can you had better come back and make some adjustment of the situation. Wire us answer promptly. ”
Appellant claims to have replied to this by telegram and letter to Collins, neither of which was produced on the trial, t’o the effect that he would take the farm back and rent it to appel-lee for grain rent. Appellee testified that he saw the letter, although he gave its contents somewhat differently, and that from that time on he went ahead and farmed the land, relying on appellant’s agreement to rent it to him for grain rent. It is claimed that the telegram sent by Collins at appellee’s request constituted an offer to surrender his contract of purchase and rent the farm for grain rent, and that the letter and telegram of appellant in reply were such an acceptance of the offer as to make, at that time, a completed contract. If such was the case, it is conceded that the oral contract claimed by appellee was without consideration.
The telegram sent by Collins to appellant, though sent at the request of appellee, was not, we think, a definite offer to release the contract of purchase and rent the farm for grain rent. It did not purport to come from appellee or to have been sent by his authority. It was from Collins, whose interest in the financial condition and prosperity of appellee, by reason of having signed his note as surety, was known to appellant. On its face, it was, at most, but a mere statement of fact to the effect that appellee was insolvent and, unless released from the contract of purchase, would have to go into bankruptcy, and the suggestion or advice that appellant come back and make some adjustment. If it had purported to come from appellee or to
If the telegram sent by Collins should, however, be considered as a definite offer to surrender the contract of purchase and rent the farm for grain rent, the question whether, a completed contract was entered into is still open. Proof of the contents of the letter and telegram of the appellant in reply was made by the testimony of appellant, Collins, and the appellee. They do not agree. Appellee testified, on cross-examination:
“Q. Mr. Myers said in that letter that he would rent the farm to you for grain rent, didn’t he? A. Yes; wanted me to stay right on the farm. Q. That he would rent it to you for grain rent and so much for the pasture? A. Yes, sir. Q. And relying on that letter, you went ahead and put in the crop in the spring of 1921 ? A. Yes, sir-. * * * After Mr. Myers came back, we wrote up the lease, Exhibit B. This was right after he came back from California. Q. You at least talked this matter over of having received this letter and telegram from Mr. Myers with Mr. Collins, didn’t you? A. Yes, we talked it over. Q. And they told you what was in the letter? A. Nothing, only they said he would lease me the place, grain rent. ’ ’
Collins testified:
“Myers in those responses said he would take the place back and rent it to Smith for grain rent.”
Appellant’s testimony was:
“As I remember it, I told him in the telegram and in the letter that I would take the place back and rent it to Smith for grain rent, as he had asked.”
'The offer, assuming one to have been made, was to release the contract and rent the farm for grain rent; while the claimed acceptance, in the letter which appellee saw, was, according to him, to the effect that appellant would rent him the farm for grain rent, and so much for the pasture. To say the least, there was a conflict in' the testimony as to the contents of one of the written communications relied upon as an acceptance of the
Moreover, the conduct of the parties does n-ot indicate that they regarded the telegrams and letter as completing a binding contract. After appellant’s return, they executed the lease referred to upon different terms from those of the claimed offer; and appellant admits that he had a conversation with appellee on the farm in May, when he secured the latter’s copy of the contract of purchase and, in his presence, wrote across the face of it the word “canceled;” but, as stated, he denied promising to surrender the note in question or to pay for the improvements. He testified:
“I did not ask Smith to sign anything then. Afterwards he gave me a quitclaim deed.”
It is doubtless true that, if there was a completed contract for the release of the contract of purchase and the renting of the farm for grain rent, made by the telegrams and the letter, the parties could thereafter carry it into effect by the surrender of the written evidence of the contract and the execution of an appropriate conveyance and a lease. And they could, by mutual agreement, modify it, as they must have done by the lease, if such a contract was made. But these facts are of importance upon the question whether there was an offer and unqualified acceptance, such as are necessary to constitute a completed contract, — whether the minds of the parties met.
We cannot say, as a matter of law, that there was a prior completed contract whereby appellee surrendered his rights under the contract of purchase, and that, therefore, the parol
It will not, perhaps, be out of place to observe in this connection that the alleged prior contract upon which appellant relies to sustain his contention of want of consideration is equally open to .the same attack, and that, as we understand the record, appellee and his wife did, in fact, after the claimed oral contract, join in a quitclaim deed of the land to appellant.
It was clearly a question for the jury whether the oral contract for the surrender or cancellation of the note and payment for the improvements had been established by the evidence. The same thing is true of the question whether there was an unqualified acceptance of the claimed offer, and therefore, at that time, a release of appellee from the contract of purchase. No complaint is made of the portion of the court’s charge dealing with this question.
What has been said disposes of the errors assigned and the propositions urged in argument. The judgment is — Affirmed.