178 Iowa 407 | Iowa | 1916
substituted petition was filed, to which Margaret C. Hawthorne answered. She also filed , , • . . , ... a counterclaim, which was replied to. The „ ^ issues thus raised were included in the original pleadings. The cause was again tried and submitted to a jury, which returned a verdict for plaintiff. Thereupon, a motion for new trial was .sustained generally, and the appeal is from this ruling. Thereupon, plaintiff moved that the court specify the grounds on which the order for new trial rested. This motion was overruled. Such a ruling is tantamount to saying that the order rested on all the grounds, for it cannot be assumed that any court would deny a party all the advantages won in a trial without being willing, on request, to specify the precise grounds for its action. It is easy for a party to conjure up any number of grounds, tenable or untenable, in a motion for new trial, and it would be unfair to litigants to rule thereon generally, without indicating what has led the court to declare the proceedings a mistrial and require all to be done over again. So it was said in Loose v. Cooper, 141 Iowa 377, that “it is better to set out the grounds of the ruling in the record.” In Turley v. Griffin, 306 Iowa 363, it was said that “appellant was not interested in what-plaintiff put in his motion, but only in what matters the court considered.” See, also, Hensley v. Davidson, 135 Iowa 106. For these reasons, we shall assume that the court, in overruling the motion to specify grounds, asserted that all the grounds enumerated were well taken.
The only objection to Instructions 5y¿ and 6 urged prior to the reading .of these to the jury, was that they authorized the assessment of the $50 paid down as part of the damages, in event recovery was had by plaintiff.
Another ground of the motions was that “the court erred in refusing to give instructions requested by the defendants.” As none were requested, this is easily disposed of.
That a different statement may have been made, or that that made was in response to something said by counsel for defendant, is not to be assumed aliunde the record before us. Nor can .that asserted to have been said be justified by any evidence contained in the record. It appeared that the contract had been assigned to one McGregor, and, two months later, reassigned to plaintiff, and with reference thereto, the latter testified:
“I siippose the real consideration for the reassignment was the $100. No, it is not true that he kept the rent, $105, for three months and I kept the $100 paid to me. McGregor was in there only two months, and I paid him back, I think, $50 in cash, if I remember right. It is barely possible that this was a note. I think I answered in the former trial: ‘ He executed to me. I am not sure whether two notes or one. They were either two for $25 or one for $50 — I am not sure— the whole amount was $50. He paid me $100 cash at the time he took up this deal. ’ ’ ’
The note or notes, if any there were, were notes offered in evidence; and in any event, counsel referred to “another note,” and, moreover, stated what he was to do with it, plainly intimating that, if the case ended to suit him, it would be returned to McGregor, who appears to have been entirely without fault in the transaction. While the court erred in sustaining the eight grounds of the motion, we are not ready to say that it abused the large discretion reposed in the trial court in granting a new trial on the last ground. What was