188 Iowa 794 | Iowa | 1920
In January, 1916, the defendants left Chickasaw County, to examine lands near Saii Benito, Texas, ad-vei’tised for sale by the Santa Clara Plantations Company. After reaching Kansas City, Missouri, they were accompanied by E. F. Hall, president of that company, and by him shown the country from an automobile. According to their account, they were, figuratively speaking, taken up into a high mountain, and shown possibilities beyond the dreams of avarice, — soil impossible to exhaust, producing as much as five crops a year, yielding, when seeded to alfalfa, ten cuttings per annum, of a ton each, and worth $17.50 a ton, an average of $500 to $900 worth of cotton per annum; and other like representations. They entered into a contract with the company for the purchase of 4=0 acres of land at $200 per acre, and, as earnest money, executed their promissory note of $3,200, dated January 1, 1916, payable April 1, 1917, bearing interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum. The remainder of the purchase price was to be paid in nine equal annual installments, evidenced by notes, and secured by vendor’s lien in the deed, which was to be executed on payment of the note first mentioned. The company sold the note of $3,200 and a farm of 50 acres, near New Hampton, subject to a mortgage of $3,000, to plaintiff for $6,000, December 29, 1916, and, in this action, the latter prays judgment against defendants for the amount of this note. In a substituted answer, the makers allege that the note, as well as the contract for the purchase price of the Texas land, was procured by fraud practiced upon them by Hall and Wilkins, as officers of the company, in knowingly misrepresenting the land, as above indicated, and in other respects; that the representations were false, but were relied upon by defendants in making the purchase. Rescission by mutual
“Where a motion for a new trial is made before a nisi prms judge, in a cause which has been tried before another judge, or before a referee, he [the judge presiding] has the right, and it is his duty, to exercise the same discretion in determining whether the motion should be granted as if the cause had beei tried before himself, with the proviso or qualification, however, that such discretion must be exercised entirely with reference 1o the evidence disclosed by*the record, as he can know nothing else as to what occurred or appeared on the trial.”
See, also, Reynolds v. Reynolds, 44 Minn. 132 (46 N. W. 236). The court’s discretion, then, must be measured solely by the record before us.
“You are instructed that, if you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the note and contract for purchase of land in controversy herein were procured by fraud, and that, in the month of March, 1917, O. L. Wilkins, president of the company, informed defendants that said company did not intend to perform its part of the contract, and that afterwards, in the same month, defendants informed said company that they would not pay said note, nor perform its contract with said company, this would constitute a rescission of the contract, and if you do not find such facts so established, then you should not find such rescission.”
The jury was not advised what bearing its finding would have on the liability of defendants. As plaintiff purchased the note more than two months previous to any talk of nonperformance -of the contract, there seems to have been no good reason for injecting this issue into the case. Section 3060-a26 of the Code Supplement, 1913, provides that:
“Where value has at any time been given for the instrument, the holder is deemed a holder for value in respect to all parties who became such prior to that time.”
The instruction, however, opened the door for a finding ‘ by the jury that the contract had been rescinded by mutual consent, and for the deduction therefrom that the consideration for the giving of the note had failed. Such failure of consideration was pleaded by defendants in an amendment immediately preceding the closing argument, and, in" overruling a motion of counsel for plaintiff to strike, the court observed that:
“The proposed amendment is in the nature of meeting
The only evidence bearing on the issue raised by the amendment was that tending to prove mutual rescission, and there is no escape from the conclusion that the instruction, given without defining the consequence of a finding thereon, constituted error, and that such instruction may have been extremely prejudicial, as the jury could have found there was a rescission, and hence, failure of consideration, and based thereon their verdict for defendants.
“To constitute notice of an infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same, the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.” Section 3060-a56, Code Supplement, 1913.
Here, the evidence tended to show that the plaintiff was “a real estate man and investor;” that, as a rule, he did “not buy commercial paperthat he knew, “about two or three weeks or a month before he bought the note, that they had it, — it might have been two months;” that he did not know of the existence of the company named as payee, at that