95 Iowa 596 | Iowa | 1895
I. This is an action upon the first of a series of three promissory notes, for two> hundred dollars each, which were given for the purchase price of a stallion, called “Harvester.” The defense is a denial that anything is due; also a counterclaim for a breach of warranty of the horse, in the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars, and the further sum of four hundred and thirty dollars special damages for money expended in advertising and in the care and feed of said horse. The jury, in answer to certain special interrogatories', found •that plaintiff warranted the horse to be a sure foal getter and a good breeding horse; that he was. not such; that the note sued upon and the two others for a like amount were given for the purchase price of the horse; that defendant has sustained one hundred and fifty dollars special damages. The jury did not return a general
IY. It is insisted that the instructions touching what will constitute a warranty were defective, in that the court failed to make a proper distinction between words of commendation and a warranty. Certain other clauses of the. instructions are complained of. Heading the entire instructions relating to this matter, we think they fully and fairly presented the law as to' what is necessary in order to constitute a warranty. Though the wording is somewhat different, yet, in legal effect, the instructions given closely follow those held good in Carter v. Abbott, 33 Iowa, 180; and the same rule was recognized and applied in Figge v. Hill, 61 Iowa, 430 (16 N. W. Rep. 339). The objections to the instructions in this respect are without merit, and need no further consideration.
VI. Error is assigned upon the giving of special interrogatories by the court on its own motion. We discover no reason for complaint. While some of the Interrogatories might have been worded so as to obviate plaintiff’s objection to their form, still they cannot be said to be prejudicial.