194 Iowa 654 | Iowa | 1922
It will be noted from the foregoing statement that the appellant has little standing ground on which to base error of law. All the errors relied on by appellant for reversal are reducible to the one proposition that the court erred in failing to find for the plaintiff. Appellant’s argument is directed largely to the proposition that there was sufficient competent evidence to sustain a finding in favor of the plaintiff on the facts. If this proposition were conceded, it would not avail the plaintiff. The weight of the evidence was for the trial judge to determine. He took the place of the jury in that regard. If the case had been submitted to a jury, and if an adverse verdict had resulted, it would not avail the plaintiff to find that the evidence was sufficient to have sustained a favorable verdict. Her position upon this record is precisely the same as though the case had been submitted to a jury, and a verdict rendered against her. It is conceivable, of course, that evidence might be of such a conclusive character as to entitle the plaintiff to a favorable finding, as a matter of law. Clearly, this is not such a case. The claim is for $525 for services for washing and mending for the decedent and for cleaning Ms room, extending over a period of five years preceding his death. The evidence offered in support of the claim is circumstantial and indefinite. If the trial judge had allowed the claim thereon, it is very doubtful whether the evidence could have been deemed by us sufficient to sustain such a finding. Needless to say, therefore, it is wholly