192 Iowa 801 | Iowa | 1921
Plaintiff owned and was operating a public eating house in the town of Oelwein, Iowa. On the 17th day of May, 1919, defendant E. W. Gremmels commenced an action in the superior court of Oelwein against the plaintiff, and sued out a writ of attachment, filing attachment bond in the usual form, signed by himself and defendant Emma D. Gremmels, in the penal sum of $1,200, and caused the writ to be levied on the property of plaintiff, consisting of a stock of goods, fixtures, equipment, and supplies in the restaurant. At the time of the levy, the plaintiff was the owner of the property by purchase under contract from Mae Kern, which contract provided for the payment by installments of $100 a month, all of which had been paid except four installments of $100 each.
Plaintiff alleged that, by reason of the wrongful suing out of the attachment in the case commenced in the superior court, and the levy upon and the taking possession of his property, he was wrongfully prevented from using his property and operating an eating house, to his great loss; that, by reason of the seizure of his plant, he was unable to make the payments on his contract of purchase, and the contract was forfeited and canceled, thereby depriving him of the ownership under the contract ; and that the property was sold to defendant E. W. Grem-mels.
Plaintiff avers that, at the time the attachment was issued and levied, he was not, as alleged in the attachment suit by Grem-mels, about to and did not intend to dispose of his property with intent to defraud his creditors; that said E. W. Gremmels had no reasonable cause to believe that the grounds upon which the writ was sued out were true; that said attachment was sued out by defendant maliciously, and with intent to injure him; that
Actual damages in the sum of $2,000 and exemplary damages in the sum of $1,500 were demanded.
Defendants admitted instituting the action in the superior court of Oelwein, and the issuance of a writ of attachment, and the levy upon plaintiff’s property, and the giving of the bond, but denied that the attachment was wrongfully sued out. From the judgment entered on the verdict, defendants prosecute this appeal.
Many errors are assigned, on which appellants rely for reversal, some of which are as to rulings in admission and exclusion of testimony, and others are lodged against instructions given. No instructions were requested.
The issues were: Was plaintiff about to dispose of his property with intent to defraud his creditors; or did defendants have any reasonable ground to believe that plaintiff was about to dispose of his property with intent to defraud his creditors'? Defendants did not, by a motion to direct a verdict, question the sufficiency of plaintiff’s case to go to the jury, and made no request for instructions. After the verdict was returned in favor of plaintiff, defendants excepted to certain instructions, and the substance of the complaint is that the instructions are not comprehensive enough; that the court on its own motion should have enlarged on the instructions so that they would have more fully explained the issues to the jury, and what evidence should be considered in determining the issues. It is not claimed that the instructions given do not correctly state the law. Appellants complain that the instructions were incomplete, and failed to give the jury an intelligent idea of the questions to be decided; and that it was error to fail to instruct with reasonable fullness,
The instructions are not vulnerable to the attack that they were so incomplete as to fail to present the necessary questions, and issues to be decided. The instructions ’were brief. They might well have been more elaborate, but they presented with clearness the issues to be determined in the case. Some additional explanatory instructions might properly have been given, but we think they were not necessary in this ease. The issues were not obscure, and were easily understandable by the jury, without further explanation than was given. While the court did not tell the jury specifically that it was not necessary that the information on which Gremmels sued out the attachment be true, if he acted in good faith and with reasonable care, and that, if the grounds of attachment were true in fact, the suing out of the writ was not wrongful, the court did, by clear instructions, place the burden on plaintiff of establishing by the evidence that, at the time the writ was sued out, he was not about to dispose of his property with intent to defraud his creditors, and that defendant E. W. Gremmels had no reasonable ground to believe that he was about to dispose of his property with intent to defraud his creditors. While the court did not give definite and explanatory instructions by way of making specific mention of items of evidence to be considered in determining any particular issue, we think the instructions fairly fulfill the office of instructions, which is to state the rules of law applicable and pertinent to the matters to be determined, and not to marshal the evidence, or by special mention to give undue prominence to any particular phase or feature of the fact case made by either party to the controversy. Kelly v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 138 Iowa 273.
Appellánts complain because witness Luthmer was permitted to testify, .over objection, that:
Plaintiff was bound to negative the charge that he was about to dispose of his property with intent to defraud his creditors, and it was competent .for him to show his intentions by showing what he did when he contemplated the sale of his property, by producing his creditors, -and by having them tell the jury the facts of the matter. The objection that such evidence was incompetent, because not in Gremmels’ presence, was properly overruled.
Error is assigned for exclusion of a certain Exhibit 41, notice of declaration of forfeiture, we assume, of the Kern contract. The instrument is not set out in the abstract. The exhibit was properly excluded on the ground that it was not properly identified, and also because it was not shown to have been served on Shippley.
Complaint is made that tbe court erred in permitting Shippley to explain, in rebuttal, a certain Exhibit 34, introduced in evidence by defendants. Tbe exhibit is:
“Oelwein, Iowa, May 9th. I hereby give Mrs. A. L. Ship-pley possession and bill of sale of tbe Antlers’ Cafe, full management and collection of all accounts. (Signed) a t m • i ,, A. L. Shippley.
We think sufficient support is found in the evidence for the finding of the jury that the attachment was maliciously sued out by Gremmels for the purpose of putting Shippley in a situation where he could not meet payment on his contracts, so that Gremmels could freeze him out, and obtain the business for himself. The record discloses that Gremmels went to the holders of the contract of purchase and asked them to foreclose or forfeit Shippley’s contract.
Complaint is made of the measure of damages adopted by the instructions. The jury was instructed to allow as actual damages, if it found for plaintiff, the reasonable market value of the property attached, at the time and place of seizure, after deducting the balance due on the contract of purchase. Also, the jury was instructed, in substance, that, if it found that the attachment was maliciously sued out, it might allow the plaintiff punitive damages. No instruction on the measure of damages was requested by defendant. We cannot say that the verdict in the amount of $1,095 for both actual and exemplary damages, under the evidence, was too high.
We have not discussed each assignment separately, but have examined all of them, and our discussion covers the points raised.
We find no error in the record. The tidal was a fair one to both parties. The judgment of the trial court will not be disturbed, and is affirmed. — Affirmed.