54 Iowa 647 | Iowa | 1880
To this question the defendant objected for the reason that the same is immaterial and incompetent. The court overruled the objection, and the witness answered: “ He appeared to blame his brother-in-law, Mr. Scott Horn, that gentleman sitting there. He said Scott was to blame for it he thought— ‘ skullduggery,’ and something to that effect.”
How the plaintiff could have conceived that his right of recovery depended to any extent upon what the deceased said about Scott Horn, or any other person, being the author • of his financial trouble at Moline, we are unable to see. It sometimes happens, however, that attorneys conceive that
The plaintiff declares upon a special contract. He can recover only by proving it as alleged. If he does prove it, and the performance upon his part, his right of recovery cannot be denied.
III. The defendants assign as error the refusal to give certain instructions asked. But no exception appears to have been reserved to the refusal to give them, and we cannot consider them.
This instruction, it appears to us, is erroneous. As the plaintiff declared upon a special contract it was sufficient to justify a verdict in favor of the defendants if the jury found simply that such contract was not made. But the instruc
Besides, the court seems to have overlooked the fact that the plaintiff had board with the decedent, as well as instruction and experience in practice. In this view we think that the instruction was calculated to mislead.
Reversed.