69 Wash. 550 | Wash. | 1912
Suit for a rescission of two contracts for the sale of real estate. Rescission denied, and money judgment entered for the plaintiff, who has appealed.
In the month of February, 1909, the appellant, then a resident of the city of Duluth, in the state of Minnesota, was attracted by an advertisement of the lands of the respondent located at Attalia, Walla Walla county, in this state, and called upon its sales agent at that place to discuss them. As a result of the discussion, he entered into a written contract with the respondent on the 25th day of February, for the purchase of two five-acre tracts. On the 5th day of June, he made a second contract with it, for the purchase of a third five-acre tract, and on the 3d day of July he made a third contract with it for the purchase of a like tract. Thereafter he left his home in Duluth for the purpose of taking up his residence at Attalia, and arrived there about the middle of October, 1909. He then examined the tracts of land embraced in his contracts, and being dissatisfied with them, arranged with the respondent to exchange them for two five-acre tracts. This arrangement was made on the 3d day after his arrival at Attalia. He had paid $1,725 on the earlier contracts, and was credited with that sum in the new contracts. The new contracts were not executed until the 7th day of December.
At the time of making the first purchases, the appellant had been a railroad bridge builder for twenty years, and had no knowledge of irrigation. The basis of his complaint is that the respondent’s sales agent at Duluth represented that
The appellant and his wife both testified that they got the first water for irrigation in the season of 1910 on the 24<th day of April, and intermittently thereafter until the 3d day of July, and that they had no water thereafter until in September. The appellant also testified, that the tunnel was repaired before the irrigation season opened; that the shortage of water was caused by the drying up of the waters of the Walla Walla river, the source of the defendant’s canal; and that a few days after he reached Attalia, he made inquiry
The prayer of the complaint is “that said contract of purchase be delivered up to be canceled,” and for damages. There was no demand for a rescission after the execution of the contracts, prior to the filing of the complaint. The commencement of the action for a cancellation of the executory contracts, if timely, was a sufficient notice of an election to rescind. The execution of a release of the contracts could have been provided for in the decree. Colpe v. Lindblom, 57 Wash. 106, 106 Pac. 634.
One who seeks to avoid a contract which he has been induced to enter into by the fraudulent representations of another touching the subject-matter of the contract, must proceed with reasonable promptitude upon discovering the fraud, or he will be held to have waived his right to rescind. Skoog v. Columbia Canal Co., 63 Wash. 115, 114 Pac. 1034; Stelter v. Fowler, 62 Wash. 345, 113 Pac. 1096, 114 Pac. 879; Owen v. Pomona & Land Water Co., 131 Cal. 530, 63 Pac. 850, 64 Pac. 253; Culver v. Avery, 161 Mich. 322, 126 N. W. 439; Tarkington v. Purvis, 128 Ind. 182, 25 N. E. 879, 9 L. R. A. 607, and foot note.
The judgment is affirmed.
Crow, Chadwick, Ellis, and Parker, JJ., concur.