65 Md. 493 | Md. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the Court.
There cannot be, it seems to us, any difficulty in this case. The suit is brought on a promissory note of $250, made by the appellee, and endorsed by the payee, Cone, to the appellant. The note was given to Cone in part payment of the purchase money of a. house, and as a defence to the action, the appellee alleges that the gahle wall of the house was, at the time he bought it, defective and unsafe, in consequence of which he was obliged to tear it down and rebuild it, at an expense of $1200. That Cone falsely and fraudulently represented the “ wall to be as solid and safe as any wall in the city,” upon the faith of which representations the appellee was induced to buy the house, and that the appellant took the note with full knowledge of its infirmity.
■ The first question, then, is whether there is any evidence from which the jury could reasonably find that the wall was defective and dangerous ? It was an ordinary nine-inch gable wall, with no less than twelve windows, sixty feet long and forty feet high. The proof shows that it had bulged several inches, and upon an examina
Then as to the false and fraudulent representations alleged to have been made by Cone. The appellee, in his testimony, says ho did not see the bulge in the wall, but noticed that it was a very long wall, and full of windows, and was therefore induced to make some inquiry of Cone about it, to which he replied that it was as safe and solid as any wall in the city. The witness, R. W. Robertson, testifies he heard Cone tell the appellee that it was a first-class wall, and that he would guarantee it to be as good as any wall in Baltimore. Now the proof shows there was a bulge in the wall at that time of at least three and a half inches, and that subsequently, upon an examination by the City Inspector, it was condemned as. being dangerous; and, in addition to this, we have the testimony of Weber, the architect, who made a thorough examination of the wall, and was of the opinion that it was' unsafe. Cone, too, was himself a builder of large experience, and whether the representations in regard to the condition of the wall were made by him in good faith, was, we think, under all the circumstances, a question for the jury.
But then again it was pressed in argument, and ■strongly too, that the appellee was precluded from setting up the defective condition of the wall as a defence in this suit, because he had sued Cone to recover damages •on account of the same. In other words, it was said he could not, in an action to recover the purchase money, set up as a defence the defective condition of the wall, and at the same time sue Cone for damages alleged to have been ■sustained, by reason of his misrepresentations in regard to the wall. But this position is not we think tenable. The •appellee had paid the entire purchase money, except the note for $250, to recover which this suit was brought, and the proof shows that he had expended one thousand dollars at least in rebuilding the wall. He had the right therefore not only to sue Cone to recover damages, which he sustained by reason of Cone’s Misrepresentation, but •also to set up the defective and unsafe condition of the wall as a defence to the suit brought on the note to remover the balance of the purchase money. This we understand to be the rule laid down in Mondel vs. Steel, 8 M. & W., 858, and Rigge vs. Burbidge, 15 M. & W., 598.
In Mondel vs. Steel, an action was brought by the buyer to recover damages for breach of an express warranty in the quality of a ship built under a written contract. The defendant pleaded that the buyer had •already recovered damages by setting up the breach of warranty in a suit brought by the defendant to recover the price of the ship; and this plea was held bad on demurrer. Baron Parke said:
“ It must, however, be considered, that in all these oases of goods sold and delivered with a warranty, and
This, Mr. Benjamin says, is the leading case now always ■cited for establishing, first, that the buyer may set up the defective quality of the warranted article in diminution of the price; and secondly, that he must bring a cross action, if he desires to claim special or consequential damages, which action is not barred by reason of his having obtained a diminution of price in a previous action brought by his vendor. Benjamin on Sales, 893.
It follows from what we have said, there was no error in the several instructions granted by the Court. If Cone honestly believed that the wall in question was a safe and good wall, and used no deceit or fraud to persuade the appellee, that it was a good and safe wall, then in the absence of an express warranty by Cone the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
On the other hand, if the wall was unsafe, and Cone knowing it to be unsafe,, falsely and fraudulently represented it to be safe, and the appellee relying on said representations purchased the house, believing the wall to be safe, and the damages sustained by him by reason -of the defective condition of the wall exceeded the amount of the note sued on, and the appellant bought the note
Judgment affirmed.