83 Iowa 726 | Iowa | 1891
The defendant, W. H. Applegate, makes the following claim, as stated by his counsel in this language “Sometime in December, 1881, owing to difficulties-between Mr. Yetzer and Mr. Applegate, the work of' the firm was discontinued, and an agreement was entered into by which the business was to be carried on by J. C. Yetzer and S. J. Applegate, under the name of Yetzer & Applegate, on account of which business W. H. Applegate was to receive, for his interest in the packing-house business, one-fourth of the profits of the business. The matter of dispute in this case is as to what were the profits of Yetzer & Applegate. The-plaintiff claims that there were no profits made, while the defendants and appellants claim that Yetzer & Applegate made a net profit of sixty-five thousand, one hundred and ten dollars and sixty-seven cents, and claim interest thereon from Mr. Yetzer at six per cent, from the time the money was withdrawn from the business to the present time, or up to the time of trial of
This finding is one of those to which we have given particular attention, because it is the one on which it is claimed with great zeal in behalf of the defendants that the facts therein found are directly contrary to the evidence, and we are assured by counsel that the evidence shows that Yetzer, by the means •above named, deliberately defrauded the other members ■of the firm of the sum of seventeen thousand dollars or thereabouts. Our examination of the evidence leads us to the same conclusion as that arrived at by the referee. "We are free to say that the conclusion cannot be vouched for as entirely accurate; and it is to be understood that in a case like this, where experts differ, mathematical accuracy cannot . always be attained. One fact stands out all through the case, and that is that W. H. Applegate, in whose behalf these charges •of fraud appear to be made, had at all times access to the books of the firm; and if this enormous fraud had been practiced it would have been promptly discovered by him, and arrested. He does not claim that he was incapable of making the discovery. . He is the principal witness by which the defendants claim to have established the fraud.
The other findings of fact, of which we have thought it proper to make special mention, are as
As we have said, there is no other objection to the report of the referee by any of the parties which we think it necessary to consider. If the contention of the defendant, W. H. Applegate, should prevail in this case, we should reach the astounding conclusion that a