Court Opinion

ID: 7103217
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:17:58.411348+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:28.961777
License: Public Domain

Seevers, J.
x. appeal : vufwofe4vi(lenco in law case. I. This being an action at law, the finding of facts made by the court has the force and effect of a verdiet of a jury. It is not our province to weigh the evidence and determine any question of fact, .... . . , h as it the action was m equity..- It there is evidence which, fairly considered, warrants the finding of the court, we cannot disturb it. After carefully reading the evidence, we feel constrained to say that the court was fully justified in making the finding it did. It is not our custom to set out the evidence at length, or state the reasons upon which our conclusion is based; and we deem it unnecessary to do so in this case, except as will hereafter be done in the discussion of certain legal propositions made by counsel.
2. vendor and reprHseina-lse ranty‘lnknmvil edge iminatenai. II. It is said there is no evidence tending to show that the defendant knew that the representations made were false, an(t that this is essential in .this action. In support of this position, Holmes v. Clark, 10 Iowa, 423, and other cases, are cited. In the cited , „ . . , _ cases there were iaise representations only. In the case at bar it is alleged in the petition, and the court *751found, tliat the defendant “ represented and warranted the lands to be choice, well-lying land, and in every respect first-class farm land, lying within about two miles of O’Connor, Nebraska,” and that the same “ were false, and made with the intention to deceive and swindle the plaintiff.” There is evidence upon which this finding' can be supported, and therefore we think this case distinguishable from the cited cases; for it is undoubtedly true that, if an article is warranted to be of a certain character, and this is shown to be false, the party injured may recover damages for a breach of warranty, without showing that the party making the warranty knew it to be false.
a£fcerSp-irtiai periormance. III. The court found that the “ defendant paid as outstanding indebtedness against said stock, including a lien he held, sum of $2,755.50, so that the amount defend-an^ receiv'ed for the land was $2,616;” and the ccmrf; a]so found that the plaintiff duly tendered back to the defendant the contracts for said land duly and legally assigned to him, and declared that he elected to rescind the contract. The plaintiff did not ask in the petition a rescission of the contract, but the parties seem to have tried the case on the theory that he did, and the court seems to have so understood. It will be observed that the court found that the defendant had paid, in pursuance of the contract, certain indebtedness of the plaintiff, amounting to $2,765.50, and therefore the contract was partially performed on his part. The plaintiff did not offer to pay such amount to the defendant. This being so, can he rescind, or what is the amount he is entitled to recover? We think the settled rule in such case is that the contract cannot be rescinded, and that the plaintiff can only recover such damages as he has sustained. That is, he must keep the land, and is entitled to recover the difference between the contract price and what it is worth. (Moore v. Bare, 11 Iowa, 198; Gates v. Reynolds, 13 Id., 1.) The court found the goods were not actually worth the amount the defendant agreed to pay, and, as *752a conclusion of law, found the plaintiff was entitled to recover $2,363.60; this being, as the coui’t thought, the amount the plaintiff gave for the land. Now, it is stated in the petition, in substance, that the land is of the actual value of four dollars per acre; and, as there is about 300 acres, it is evident the judgment is excessive, and for a greater amount than plaintiff is entitled to recover.
There are other errors assigned and urged by counsel, none of which are well taken. Eor the error above stated, the judgment is Reversed.