137 Iowa 558 | Iowa | 1907
On April 18, 1895, Joseph Holmes was engaged in conducting a factory at Marshalltown, this State, for the manufacture of soap. Previous thereto he had also been engaged in conducting a separate factory for the manufacture of vinegar and pickles, but this factory had burned down, and no effort looking to. a restoration thereof had been made by him. A short time prior to the date named above, the defendant, corporation was organized, the purpose being to engage in the manufacture of vinegar, pickles, soap, etc., at Marshalltown, and on that date a contract in writing was entered into between said Holmes and said corporation, the provisions of which were, in substance, as follows: The said Holmes subscribes for $1,000 of the capital stock of the company, to be issued to M. A. Holmes, and to be paid for on call of the directors. Said Holmes agrees to lease his soap factory to the company for the term of six months from July 1, 1905, at a rate of rental named, and with option on the part of the company to extend the period up to five years. Said company agrees to purchase at market prices all manufactured cider and manufactured soap and raw materials for the manufacture of soap on hand at the time of the beginning of the lease period, payment to be made on delivery. “ It is further agreed by and between these contracting parties that party of the first part being experienced in the manufacture of vinegar, pickles, and soap that he will devote his time for six months, beginning with the time that building operations have become sufficiently advanced to require his attendance, to the final construction of the building which party of the second part is to occupy, to the setting of machinery suitable for the business, and to the business in which party of the second part will be engaged — that is, the manufacture of vinegar, pickles, and soap — and will give said business his attention and services for the best in
This is the contract sued upon in this action, and it is alleged in the petition that said Holmes fully performed on his part; that the defendant has refused to pay the sum of $3,000 as therein provided, although its business has been prosperous and the profits sufficient to pay said sum. An assignment of the contract, and all rights thereunder, by Holmes to plaintiff, as of date May 23, 1905, is alleged. The answer denies generally, except as to matters involved in the admissions which follow. It admits the making of the contract, admits compliance with the provisions thereof .on the part of Holmes in all respects, save in the matter of the service to be rendered by him, and, as to such,' it denies. And, in this connection, defendant alleges fraud on the part of Holmes in the making of said contract, in that he falsely and fraudulently represented himself to be an expert in the manufacture of pickles and vinegar, whereas in truth he was ignorant and unskilled; that defendant, being without knowledge on the subject, relied upon such representation, and but therefor said contract would not have been entered into. And the allegation is extended to say that, in addition to his ignorance, said Holmes was physically incapacitated for the work he undertook to do. In a counterclaim pleaded, defendant alleges loss and damage occasioned to it through said Holmes, in that, because of and due to his ignorance, want of skill, and inattention to duty, about one thousand eight hundred bushels of cucumbers in brine of the value of $1,-
II. Many remarks of the court and rulings made in the course of the introduction of the evidence are complained of. As there are more than forty of these complaints, it must be apparent that we cannot within reasonable limits devote space to a consideration of each thereof separately. Accordingly we content ourselves by saying that our reading discloses no error which would warrant a reversal of the judgment.
IY. Complaint is made of several of the instructions given by the court. We have gone over them carefully and in detail, and, while some defects appear, they are technical in character and such as that it is not probable the jury were misled thereby. Taken as a whole, the case was fairly and fully covered, and our approval must follow.
Finding no errors calling for a reversal of the judgment, the same must be, and it is, affirmed.