184 Iowa 23 | Iowa | 1918
The terms of the sale, as announced, were that a bankable note, due in 12 months, would be taken for all sums above $10, and that all sums of $10 or under must be paid in cash. One Wenger was the auctioneer, and Pauls was the clerk of the sale. The mare, Nettie, had been slightly
The one proposition which is argued before us, and upon which a reversal is claimed, is that the defendant’s purchases were five separate transactions, and that the right of rescission as to one in no manner affected the completed transaction as to the others; that the plaintiff, having replevined all the property, must necessarily fail as to four items thereof. This argument is predicated upon the theory that the note for $210.62 covered the purchase price of four items, and that it was bankable; and that the $161-note carried the only departure from the terms of the sale.
There is room here for the argument that this attempted rescission by the purchaser was illegal and ineffective, for want of authority in Pauls to assent thereto. If the question of legality of the rescission by the purchaser were controlling, this argument would be available against the purchaser, and not in his behalf. Even though the purported rescission on his part were wrongful and legally ineffective, yet, pursuant thereto, he had obtained possession of the note and destroyed it. He thereby made the purported rescission a fact accomplished (fait accompli) and put it beyond the power of the seller to resist, and beyond the power of himself to yield or to revoke. By the destruction of - the note, he had not only repudiated the settlement, but' had rendered impossible the restoration thereof.