188 Iowa 528 | Iowa | 1920
To this counterclaim the plaintiffs filed a reply, saying that the matters and things set out in defendant’s counterclaim have been adjudicated between the parties in a suit heretofore brought in the district court of Dallas County by these plaintiffs against the defendant; that, in said suit, the plaintiffs sought to recover a portion of the purchase price due upon said contract of sale, and this defendant filed an answer defensively based upon the same allegations of fraud set up in the counterclaim in this suit, and, in a cross-petition based on the same fraud pleaded in his counterclaim, asked affirmative relief, to wit, that the contract be canceled, set aside, and held for naught, because of such fraud, and further filed a counterclaim in which he sought to recover damages based upon the fraud now relied upon in the counterclaim in this suit. The counterclaim, however, was . withdrawn before the case was finally submitted to the Dallas County court; but the fraud defensively alleged, and the fraud alleged upon which he predicated a right to have the contract canceled, set aside, and held for naught, remained in the case, and was in the case at the time it was passed upon by the Dallas County court. Upon a hearing in that court, plaintiffs’ petition was dismissed upon its merits, and defendant’s answer and cross-petition determined and dismissed upon their merits.
The decree relied upon by the plaintiffs as an adjudication of the matters set out by the defendant in his counterclaim in this suit is as follows:
The district court from which this appeal is taken held that this decree adjudicated the rights of the plaintiffs upon the counterclaim urged in this suit, and that the defendant is now estopped to set it up for re-adjudication, and so dismissed the counterclaim, and entered judgment for the plaintiffs upon the notes. From this action, defendant appeals.
The only question here is whether or not the matters herein relied on as a counterclaim were adjudicated adversely to this defendant in the Dallas County suit. If they were, that ends this controversy, so far as the defendant’s right to maintain his counterclaim in this suit is concerned. This decree, upon its face, indicates that the facts on which de fendant bases his counterclaim in this suit were determined on their merits adversely to defendant’s claim made here. The claims here being substantially the same as there, an
“The plaintiffs, for cause of action, state that the plaintiffs are residents of Audubon County, Iowa, and that the defendant is a resident of Dallas County, Iowa; that, on or about the 14th day of October, 1911, the defendant purchased of the plaintiffs, on the crop payment plan, the west half of Section 30, Township 28, Range 3 West of the 35th M., Saskatchewan, Canada; that a copy of said contract of sale and purchase is hereto attached, marked Exhibit A, and the same is hereby made a part hereof; that, in accordance with said contract, marked Exhibit A, the defendant took up his residence on said above-described land in the spring of 1912; that the said defendant farmed said premises, and raised crops thereon during the years 1912, 1913, and 1914, and in accordance with the terms of said contract of sale, amounting to approximately f1,800 ; that the defendant has paid plaintiffs but $500 of said amount, plus the taxes, leaving a balance due of approximately $1,300. Wherefore, plaintiffs asked judgment against the said defendant in the said sum of $1,300 and the costs of this action, taxed at $. Exhibit A, annexed to the petition, is a copy of the contract annexed to the answer and counterclaim in this case.”
To which the defendant replied, by way of answer and cross-petition, to defeat recovery on the contract, that the contract relied upon was procured by fraud, and then set out the same fraud relied on in the counterclaim here, alleg
The prayer of plaintiffs’ cross-petition in the Dallas County suit was that the petition be dismissed, and the contract be decreed to be fraudulent and void, and that it be canceled and set aside. This defense, the court dismissed upon its merits. In the decision of the case, the court said :
“Plaintiffs on the trial of this case introduced many letters from the defendant while he was residing on the land in controversy. The statements and representations contained in these letters are not calculated to impress one with the full confidence he might otherwise have in defendant’s testimony, as given on tlpe trial, as to alleged fraudulent statements and representations to induce the defendant to execute the contract. There is no question
Thereupon, the court set out the letters from the defendant which had been introduced in evidence, bearing upon this question. The court further said:
“In all this correspondence, to this date, the only complaint made as to false representations is the following: 'I have borrowed considerable money of you. The bulk of it has been used right here, to improve your place, as it was not fit for man or beast when I arrived here; and, in fact, had I seen it before I bought it, I would have passed it by. Now everything is in good condition as to fences, buildings, and land. I borrowed something 'over $500 from you, to break out land that was sold to me as ready for the drill; but we will say nothing more about that/ ”
The court further said:
“Mr. Jump seeks relief from his contract, but nowhere claims in these letters that he was defrauded in the purchase of the land; says he cannot stand the opposition in the home any longer, etc., and further says: ‘I have no complaint of productiveness. I am not going to Iowa to score Canada. I expect to remain mute as to why I am compelled to quit. Wickhams know all about the trouble. My wife has told them long ago; and later, I wrote a letter to keep very quiet. I will get you a good renter for the place Times will pick up. Prices are good this year. We seem to be in a favorable locality. We have very much to be thankful for. Other parts of Canada are a complete failure, this year. In fact, there has never been a failure in here, according to old-timers. I think it is a great place for stockraising of all kinds. I just got fixed so I could accomplish my desired end, and now it is all at an end/ ”
“One cannot read- these letters without knowing why. In some respects, these letters are stronger against defendant’s present contention than were the letters in Handley v. Handley, 115 Iowa 151, against the plaintiff. These were written when there was no lawsuit or controversy between the parties, and when there was nothing to induce an untrue statement. I reach the conclusion that proofs fail to establish the alleged fraud, and further that, if such fraud is shown by a preponderance of the evidence, that defendant failed to act with promptness, and that, by his conduct, he elected to carry out the contract.”
The court further said:
“The defendant’s contention is that there was fraud in the contract, on account of which he had a right to rescind the same. If he was sustained in this contention, there would be no liability on his part for any part of the purchase price, or for damages, nor could specific performance be enforced against him. It has been found that he had no right to rescind the contract on this account, but the fact remained that he abandoned the land, violated the contract, and refuses to further perform. In such case, what are the plaintiffs’ rights? Not to recover any part of the purchase price, but to recover damages, if any have been sustained. * * * As the court has found that the defendant did not and could not rescind the contract on the alleged fraud, but that he abandoned the premises without right to do so, and as this proposition is not involved in this branch of the case, the authorities cited demand no further attention. * * * The action at bar was brought as a law action, to i’ecover a part of the purchase price. Defendant’s answer was filed, and the case was transferred to the equity side of the docket. No change was made in plaintiffs’ claim, or the character of the relief asked. It is yet an action to recover part of the purchase price of
We have not attempted to set out all that the court said in its finding, upon which its decree was based, but enough to show that the case was fully tried and determined on the issues made, and that the court affirmatively found against the defendant on its contention that the contract was induced by fraud, and further found that, if induced by fraud, the defendant waived the fraud, and by his conduct is now estopped from asserting that he was fraudulently induced to make the contract, as a basis for relief, and found affirmatively that this claim did not defeat plaintiffs’ right to recover the purchase price.
In its ultimate finding, the court said to the defendant:
“I have examined your testimony touching the fraud which you claim was practiced upon you to induce you to enter into this contract. You have not sustained this claim, and plaintiffs’ right to recover cannot be defeated upon this contention. No fraud was practiced upon you; and, if it were, you have waived the fraud, and are now estopped to insist upon it against the claim which the plaintiffs are urging against you, and this claim is dismissed for want of merit.”
“It is true the defendant had no right to abandon this land. You practiced no fraud upon him, but he has attempted to rescind the contract, though wrongful, has abandoned the land, and you have taken possession, and are now in possession, and have been in possession for some years. You have acquiesced in his wrongful rescission of the contract. The contract is, therefore, as between you and him, at an end. You cannot maintain a suit for part of the purchase price provided for in the contract. If you can, then you can consent to a rescission of the contract, and hold the defendant to its performance, and recover from the defendant the whole. consideration provided for in the contract, at the same time taking back and receiving from the defendant the consideration which you gave for his promise.”
We are not unmindful of the fact that what was said by the court is no part of its decree; but the decree itself states that defendant’s contention was dismissed on its merits, and this statement of the decree is fully confirmed by an examination of the records. The defendant had his day in court upon the contention now made, and the court has determined his contention against him. He is now estopped to relitigate it, or to base any claim upon facts adjudicated against him in that trial. As said in Goodenow v. Litchfield, 59 Iowa 226, 231:
“The rule, as appears to be well stated by all the authorities, is that, where a former judgment or decree is relied upon as a bar to an action, it must appear, either by the record or by extrinsic evidence, that the particular matter in controversy and sought to be concluded was necessarily tried and determined in the former action.”
In Hahn v. Miller, 68 Iowa 745, 748, it was said:
“The general rule undoubtedly is that the judgment of a competent court is conclusive between the parties upon
It is true that, in the Dallas County court, the plaintiffs were not defeated on the ground that they had or had not practiced fraud upon the defendant in procuring the contract, but the defendant tendered that issue, and sought relief against the obligations of the contract upon that issue. He urged that issue defensively to the court, and the court found against him on that issue, and dismissed his answer and cross-petition on its merits. The plaintiffs were defeated upon another ground, also urged by the defendant; but this makes the finding of the court, embodied in its decree, no less binding on the defendant than if defendant had obtained relief from the obligation of his contract on this matter pleaded. Had defendant sustained the matters set up in his answer and cross-petition, based upon the alleged fraud practiced upon him in procuring the contract, it would have put an end to plaintiffs’ case. Plaintiffs could not have recovered any part of the consideration, based upon a contract into which they had fraudulently induced defendant to enter. Defendant sought relief from the obligations of his contract upon this ground, and introduced evidence to support this contention. This evidence was reviewed by the court, and found not to sustain the contention. Upon this review and this finding, the court dismissed his contention, and ordered his cross-petition dismissed upon its merits. See Watson v. Richardson, 110 Iowa 698.
In Black v. Miller, 158 Iowa 293, 298, this court said:
Upon the whole record, we think the court was right in its holding that the matter urged by the defendant in the counterclaim now in suit was adjudicated in the Dallas County action, and defendant is now estopped to re-adjudicate it here, and its action is — Affirmed.