68 Iowa 386 | Iowa | 1886
The contract in question was designed to be executed in duplicate. Two copies were made, and both acknowledge the receipt of $1,200 as paid in hand; but for some reason the copies, as they are shown to us, differ in date. The one held by defendants is dated January 4, 1884, and the one held by plaintiff is dated January 24, 1884. Both copies, of course, cannot be correct. If the defendants’ copy is the true one, it would appear very clearly that the $1,200 acknowledged therein to have been paid was paid on the fourth day of January, 1884; and, as it is conceded that there was a payment of $1,200 on the twenty-fourth day of January, it would appear that there must have been two payments of $1,200 each, as the defendants claim. A considerable amount of evidence was introduced for the purpose of showing which was the true copy. We cannot set it all out in detail, but will refer to most of it in a general way. The defendants testily that the duplicate copies were signed in their butcher shop on the fourth day of January, and the plaintiff testifies that they were signed in the Mei'chants’ National Bank of
The contract provided, not only for a sale and conveyance of certain lots by the plaintiff, but also for the erection thereon of a dwelling-house. The money called for by the contract, to-wit, $2,775, was agreed upon as the price of both lots and house. Now, the evidence, we think, shows pretty clearly that the plan of the house was not sufficiently settled as early as January 4th to fix the price. It is possible, of course, that the defendants might agree to pay a fixed sum for a house and lots without knowing what the house was to be, but it seems improbable that they did. The defendants undertake to account for the money with which they say that a payment of $1,200 was made January 4th. They say that Mrs. Davidson had at that time $1,700, which she brought with her to Burlington about two years before from Illinois, where she and her husband had been living on a farm owned by her. This money, they say, was never deposited in bank, nor loaned, nor used in any way, but was 'kept in their house, where they had no safe; and that, too, notwithstanding the husband was absent a part of the time as a brakemanupon a railroad, and Mrs. Davidson was left alone in the house, there being no other members of the family. While the facts might be as testified to by them, no one, we think, can read their statements without some suspicion of their truthfulness.
Again, it is admitted by the defendants that they took no> receipt for any money paid on the twenty-fourth of January. They disclaim, of course, the receipt contained in the contract as applicable to that payment. According to their theory, they paid up the contract in full on the twenty-fourth of January, and took no receipt, nor did they obtain a deed. The only explanation offered by their counsel is that they were not much acquainted with business. But they had managed to accumulate considerable property, and, if their own testimony
The testimony shows that the contract in question, as evidenced by the duplicate copies, was partly reduced to writing some days previous, and perhaps as early as the 4th. It seems probable that the date first inserted was the fourth, or that a
Without stating all the considerations relied upon by the defendants, we have to say that we think that the court did not err in finding the true date of the contract to be Januuary 21th. This finding, if correct, so far impeaches the honesty of the defendants as to greatly impair their credibility upon other points. We find, therefore, that the court did not err in not crediting their testimony as to the payment of $375 alleged to have been made.