59 Iowa 296 | Iowa | 1882
The fact appears to be that the notice was given on the 26th day of May, 1879; that the claim was filed on the first
The evidence shows, and the court found, that the plaintiff’s attorneys received the claim for collection in December, 1879; that upon receipt of the claim they prepared a notice for the administratrix to appear at the March term, 1880, which would have been in due time; that they were induced, however, to delay filing the claim and serving the notice by a request of one Gibbons, a member of the Lee county bar, who requested that no costs should be made, and promised to see the administratrix with a view to an adjustment of the matter; that Gibbons had never been specially employed in respect to this claim, but had been employed to some extent by the administratrix in behalf of the estate. It further appears that the estate is solvent and unsettled.
The foregoing are in substance the facts upon which the plaintiff relies for equitable relief, and the question presented is as to whether they are sufficient.
It should be observed that the delay in this case was very slight. The claim was filed and notice served nearly three months before the expiration of the year. And while it is true that this was not'done in time to prove the claim within the year, yet the term at which it was provable commenced within a few days after the expiration of the year. Again, the estate is solvent and unsettled. Such a fact is mentioned in Brayley v. Ross, 33 Iowa, 507, as a circumstance which should be allowed its influence. Where such is the case it is
We proceed then to inquire into the grounds upon which the plaintiff seeks relief. His attorneys made a mistake. They delayed under the supposition that they were accommodating the estate in compliance with the request of the administratrix’s attorney. Perhaps no great diligence was necessary to save them from such mistake; but we assume that Gibbons was. a reputable attorney and entitled to ordinary professional confidence. Now, when he made a request in behalf of the estate he impliedly assumed to represent it, and this assumption, together with the knowledge possessed by the plaintifi’s attorneys that Gibbons had been employed in behalf of the estate to some extent, we think, was a sufficient excuse for their slight delay.
The defendant averred that the liquor for which the account accrued was sold ^ith intent to violate the laws of Iowa. By one of the interrogations propounded the jury was required to find whether the liquor was sold with such intent, and the answer given by the jury was: “We do not know the intent.”
If the general verdict had been for the plaintiff, there would certainly not be enough in the special verdict to entitle the defendant to have the general verdict set aside. The burden was upon her to establish the alleged defense. Her only means, in such case, of making out her defense, would have been to ask the court to require the jury to answer the interrogatory respecting the alleged intent. It is possible, that while they preferred to evade it, they might, if required to answer it, have felt constrained to answer it in the affirmative. And, notwithstanding the general verdict was' in her favor, she might, perhaps, in anticipation that the instruction directing the general verdict would be held erroneous, have required that the issue respecting the alleged intent be specially passed upon, so that if the finding thereon should be in her favor she would, notwithstanding the error in the instruction, if any, directing the general verdict in her favor, be still entitled to a general verdict. The question is, was she bound, in anticipation that the instruction might be held erroneous, to undertake to save her rights by securing a special verdict in her favor respecting the alleged intent, and having failed to do so, is she now bound by the incomplete special verdict which leaves a material issue tendered by her wholly undetermined?
It appeal’s to us that her case is not different from what it would have been if there had been no special verdict of any kind. The plaintiff, then, does not appear to be entitled to judgment upon the special verdict, and the case must be remanded for another trial.'
Reversed.