103 Iowa 389 | Iowa | 1897
The plaintiff claims that in the latter part of July, in the year 1894, he sold ¡and delivered to the defendant two thousand three hundred bushels of corn contained in two cribs, at the agreed price of fifty cents per 'bushel. The defendant admits that he entered into a verbal agreement with the plaintiff for the purchase of not less than one thousand, six hundred nor more than two thousand 'bushels of corn at the price stated, and that fifty dollars were paid to the plaintiff by virtue of the agreement; but denies that the corn was delivered, and alleges that the plaintiff has failed and refused to perform his part of the agreement. Soon after the sale is alleged to have been made, and while the corn remained in the crib, it was destroyed by fire. The verdict was for eight hundred and twenty dollars and ninety-three cents, and the judgment rendered was for that sum, with interest and costs.
had not been opened, contained one thousand, six hundred bushels. Com had been taken from the other crib, but it then contained about seven hundred 'bushels. The grounds upon which the defendant insists that the corn was not delivered are stated to be that he purchased but a part of the com in the two cribs, and there was never any separation of the' part he
IY. It appears that in February, 1893, the plaintiff executed to his mother a mortgage upon all of his crops to be grown .on the Erickson farm during that year. The mortgage purported to secure a promissory note for the sum of one thousand and seventy dollars, was recorded, and does hot appear to be satisfied of record. It was pleaded by the defendant to show that the plaintiff did not have a right to sell the corn in question. The plaintiff testified that he had executed the mortgage, and caused it to be recorded, before he told his mother of It; and that, when informed in regard to it, she had refused to accept it. The defendant makes some objection to his testimony upon that point, but, as he does not argue the objection, we need not notice it further. This is true of other objections referred to by the defendant.
Paragraphs of the charge to the jury are criticised, but, so far as the objections thus made are material, they are disposed of by what we have already said. There does not appear to be any sufficient ground for disturbing the judgment of the district court, and it is AFFIRMED.