43 Iowa 415 | Iowa | 1876
We think the evidence before us supports the decree rendered in the Circuit Court. From their earliest childhood the plaintiffs were subject to the authority of defendant, who stood, as to them, in loco parentis. The evidence shows that,
The record presents the case of defendant standing in loco ■-parentis to all the plaintiffs, and the guardian of all but one of them, procuring the execution of the contracts after their majority, but before they were emancipated from the habit of obedience and deference to him, by the exercise of his authority, by solicitation, and, in one instance, through fear excited by false rejn’esentations.
The decree of the Circuit Court, besides declaring the contract invalid, provides that plaintiffs recover $1,790 of defendant for the rent of the land since the plaintiffs arrived at their majority. The evidence supports this provision of the decree. It ought, however, to have further provided that the notes executed by defendant, which the evidence shows plaintiffs offered to surrender, be given up to plaintiff. A decree will be rendered in this court conforming to the decree of the court helow, with the condition just suggested that the promissory
Aeeiemed.