12 Iowa 577 | Iowa | 1862
Petition claims one hundred and seventy dollars with interest, and for cause states, that on the 17th of March, 1859, one Batchelder executed to plaintiff a promissory note for $170, due January 1, 1860, for a sum of money then due; that plaintiff agreed to extend the time as aforesaid, in consideration of an agreement of said Batch-elder before that time made to secure the said sum; that this agreement was made on or about the 1st of March, 1859 ; that B. then represented that he had entered into an
We are not advised by counsel of the grounds upon which this demurrer was sustained. We regard the petition sufficient, and shall proceed, therefore, to notice the objections made to it in argument.
The petition does not count upon a contract, nor are there two causes of action stated therein. We understand it to be, what under the common law classification would be an action on the case for the fraud of the defendant. What is said upon the subject of the contract, or the several contracts, is but an inducement and for the purpose of showing the manner -in which the fraud was committed. The gravamen of the action is the fraud.
It is entirely immaterial whether the deed placed in the hands of Brush took effect from that tijne, or only from the date of its subsequent delivery to plaintiff. Though the title may have remained in Blakeslee until such actual delivery, plaintiff’s action, under the circumstances stated, would not be defeated. Defendant was bound to act in good faith. If he was guilty of fraud and there was consequent
It matters not that the contract of sale was between Batchelder and Blakeslee. It is not for a breach of this contract that plaintiff seeks to recover. He complains that defendant violated his contract with the intent to defraud plaintiff, after the parties had mutually entered into an arrangement, which was to be beneficial to defendant, and result in the security of plaintiff’s claim.
The fact that the agreement of the more immediate parties to the contract (Batchelder and Blakeslee,) was in legal contemplation incorporated in their deeds, can not avail defendant. This has nothing to do with his false and fraudulent representations, nor with his fraudulent act after the deeds were made. It is well settled that what is said in good faith in a treaty for purchase and sale is merged in the purchase when consúmate!; but if the representations were known to be false, and have produced damage, the consummation of the contract will not shield the party from the consequences of his fraudulent representations. Much more will
Reversed.