156 P. 274 | Or. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
The grounds upon which the Circuit Court based its ruling were: (1) That the representations made by the defendant to the plaintiffs in the exchange of properties were merely the owner’s estimate of value, and not recitals of fact; (2) that the plaintiffs did not rely upon said statements, but upon their own judgment; (3) that plaintiffs did not exercise ordinary care for their own protection; and (4) that the release executed by the plaintiff James E. Allen discharged the defendant from whatever liability there may have been in the premises.
“As a general rule, the mere expression of an opinion which is understood to be only an opinion does not render a person expressing it liable for fraud. But, where the statements are as to value or quality, and are made by a person knowing them to be untrue, with an intent to deceive and mislead the one' to whom they are made, and he is thus induced to forbear making inquiries which he otherwise would, they may amount to an affirmation of fact rendering him liable therefor. In such a case, whether a representation is an expression of an opinion or an affirmation of a fact is a question for the jury. The rule that no one is liable for an expression' of an opinion is applicable only when the opinion stands by itself as a distinct thing.”
In the instant case there is no evidence tending to show that the defendant knew his expressions about the value of his property to be untrue. Neither is there any showing that they prevented the plaintiffs from investigating that matter. Want of these characteristics take this contention out of the rule an
“To constitute a consideration for a contract or promise it is not absolutely necessary that a benefit should accrue to the person making the promise. It is sufficient that something valuable flows from the person to whom it is made, and that the promise is the inducement to the transaction”: 2 Words and Phrases, p, 1446; 1 Words and Phrases, Second Series, p. 903.
While it is true that the plaintiff executing the instrument obtained no greater benefit than the firm of brokers had promised him, yet it is without controversy that the defendant paid his $300 named in his release for the very purpose of obtaining his discharge; and, while the plaintiff Allen gained no more than what had been pledged to him by the real estate agents, yet, as the defendant had parted with actual value, it validated the contract as to him. The release being unquestionably effective as to James E. Allen, a verdict in favor of both him and his wife would in any event be contrary to the admitted effect of the evidence which would vitiate the judgment at
Its judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.