The substance of the charge against the ap
To this accusation defendant entered a plea of not guilty. Trial was had to a jury, resulting in a verdict of guilty; and from the judgment entered thereon, he appeals to this court.
I. The first conterition for a reversal is upon the proposition that the alleged false representations are not supported by the evidence, and that there is a failure to prove that Lent believed and relied upon the alleged false statements of the de- ■ fendant.
As is not unusual in eases of this character, there is a sharp • and irreconcilable conflict in the testimony of witnesses, and if the jury accepted the truth of the showing made in the defendant’s behalf, an acquittal wordd necessarily follow; but it cannot be said that the verdict of guilty is without support in the evidence. It is shown without dispute that defendant did undertake to sell the stock of goods to Lent at the estimated price and value of $8,500, and that, in consideration of such sale, Lent conveyed to defendant a certain house and lot at $4,500, and gave him a check for the further sum of $2,000 and a promissory note for a deferred payment of $2,000. It is also conceded that, in the consummation of the deal, defendant executed and delivered to Lent a written bill of sale of the stock of goods, in which writing he expressly warranted the title to said property, and that the same was free from incumbrance and liens. Except for the bill of sale, the details of the transaction were not reduced to writing. There was also evidence by Lent that, when defendant proposed the deal, he, the witness, asked defendant,
1. Trial: instructions : nonap-plicability to pleadings. II. Exception was taken to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that “a lien on personal property is, in law, somewhat of the nature of a mortgage, and under the bulk sales law, the transfer of a stock from seller to purchaser does, not constitute a lien on the stock of goods transferred.” The request was properly denied. It is entirely true that “a transfer of a stock of goods does not constitute a lien on the stock,” but it is also entirely immaterial. It is true, however, that a transfer or sale of a stock of merchandise in built, without giving the notice required by statute, Chapter 64, Acts of the Thirty-seventh General Assembly, renders the purchaser chargeable for the value thereof, in favor of the unpaid creditors of the seller. Technically, this may not constitute a lien, but it does impose an incumbrance or burden upon the goods so sold, in the hands of the purchaser, and the existence of a valid claim of that character constitutes a breach of the seller’s warranty. Upon no conceivable theory of the present ease was the requested instruction allowable.
2. Appeal and error: harmless error: improper offer. III. Appellant charges counsel for the State with misconduct in asking a witness whether he knew of another alleged act of fraudulent misrepresentation by the defendant. The question met with prompt objection by counsel for defendant, and the objection was sustained, and the answer excluded. Without stopping to consider or decide upon the admissibility of the evidence, it is sufficient, for the purposes of this case, that the ruling was in de
3. Criminal law: trial: defendant’s failure to testify. Further complaint is made that counsel for the State in argument improperly alluded to the fact that defendant had not submitted to examination as a witness. This is based upon the fact that counsel in argument made and repeated the statement that no witness had denied certain alleged material facts. Counsel for the prosecution is, of course, bound by the letter and spirit of the statute, and by proper regard for the ethics of the profession, to observe and respect the defendant’s rights in this respect; but if, in good faith, he conceives that pertinent facts developed by the State tending to prove guilt have not been met or denied, we think it within the scope of his privilege to remind the jury of that fact. ¥e discover nothing in. this case which constitutes error in this respect.
4. Criminal law: new trial: newly discovered testimony. IY. Defendant moved for a new trial on the ground that, since the verdict, he has ascertained that one of the jurors, upon his voir dire, concealed the fact that he was indebted to the defendant, and upon the further ground of newly discovered evidence to the effect that the complaining witness had admitted to one Lob-dell his agreement to assume and pay the bill held by the Tootle-Oampbell Dry Goods Company. The motion was denied, and error is assigned on the ruling. The ground of the objection to the juror is disputed, and there is an entire absence of any showing from which any prejudice can be presumed to have resulted to the defendant. The evidence proposed to be given by the witness Lobdell is clearly cumulative, and insufficient to justify a new trial. See State v. King, 97 Iowa 440, and State v. Sangster, 196 Iowa 495.
The charge of the court fully and fairly covers the several points of law argued by counsel. The ease appears to have been fairly tried, and the judgment of the district court is—Affirmed.