69 N.Y. 577 | NY | 1877
The judge at the trial submitted to the jury certain questions of fact, upon which they found in favor of the plaintiff, and we think there is no sufficient ground for claiming that these findings are not sustained by the testimony. The evidence tended to establish that the husband of the plaintiff acted as her agent in making the contract; but the contract being under seal and executed by him in his own name could not be enforced as the contract of another not mentioned in or a party to the instrument, or proof that he had oral authority from such other to enter into the contract, and acted as agent in the transaction. (Briggs v. Partridge,
The proof tended to show that the defendant by his acts and statements conveyed the impression to and induced a belief of the plaintiff that the entire farm was purchased, and that the contract and conveyance covered the three acres in controversy. It is true that fraud is not to be presumed, and must be established by proof; but this legal presumption is rebutted when the attending circumstances lead to the conclusion that a fraud has been perpetrated. The proposition that the parties should be held to know that the description of the premises in the contract and deed did not include the three acres, and that the plaintiff was thereby notified of their contents, we think cannot be maintained. Neither the contract with the plaintiff's husband nor the deed to her establish affirmatively this fact, and it is not difficult to see that a party unfamiliar with the precise boundaries of a farm of land might not discover the omission of an inconsiderable portion of the same from a mere inspection of the papers. More especially might this be the case where such party had reason to believe that it was intended to include such portion in the conveyance. There is certainly strong ground for claiming that the plaintiff was deceived in regard to the description of the premises by the statements of the defendant. A deduction of fraud may be made not only from deceptive assertions and false representations directly made, but from facts, incidents, and circumstances which may be trivial in themselves, but decisive evidence of a fraudulent design. (2 Kent's Com., 484; 1 Parsons on Con., 460, et seq.) The conduct of a party which tends to conceal or suppress material facts is frequently as effective in deceiving another, as actual false representations. That the plaintiff relied upon the representations made or the acts of the defendant, and was deceived thereby, is established by the verdict of the jury with sufficient evidence to support it. *582
The claim of the defendant's counsel that the decision is not sustained by the findings of fact is not, we think, well founded. Although the negotiations originally resulted in a contract with the plaintiff's husband, yet the plaintiff was cognizant of the facts and circumstances connected with the bargain, and of the representations and acts of the defendant, which were continued up to the time of the conveyance to her, and evidently induced a belief on her part that she was purchasing the whole farm. In view of all the facts, it would not be unreasonable to assume that she was induced to accept the conveyance by the suggestions and conduct of the defendant. Having good reason to believe that she purchased the entire farm, and having taken possession under the deed, of the land omitted, the contract actually made by the defendant with her, became executed by this partial performance, and if there was fraud on the part of the defendant in deceiving her as to the lot of land in controversy, she is not precluded by the statute of frauds from maintaining an equitable action to compel performance of the contract. If there is any omission to find the necessary facts to sustain the judgment, the rule for judgment will be construed as a finding of the necessary facts. (Rider v. Powell,
The defendant further claims that the verbal negotiations being within the statute of frauds, and the plaintiff having made no improvement on the premises, the plaintiff cannot claim the land, but is confined to relief in damages. The case of Glass v.Hulbert (
In the opinion of the learned judge, after referring to the case of Smith v. Underdunck (1 Sandf. Ch., 579), and stating that the decision rests upon the fact of possession by the plaintiff of the entire premises, including the part for which the bill was brought, and which, together with the contract, was admitted by the demurrer, and therefore the question of the statute of frauds did not arise, it is said: "That the purchaser has been let in possession in pursuance of a parol agreement has been generally recognized as sufficient to take it out of the statute." In a subsequent portion of the opinion the rule is laid down that, upon principle, a conveyance of land cannot be decreed in equity by reason of a mere oral agreement, in the absence of evidence of a change of situation, a part performance creating an estoppel against the plea of the statute, thus making an exception when possession has been taken under the deed. The marked difference between the cases cited and the one at bar is of such a character that the former could scarcely be considered as an authority applicable to the latter. In the case of Glass
v. Hulbert, above cited, some of the authorities in this State are commented upon and criticised, and it is conceded that the doctrine attempted to be defined *584
has not been universally recognized or observed. In fact, it is quite clear that the authorities in this State are in a contrary direction, and the uniform current of decisions has been to entertain jurisdiction and grant relief in such cases as not being within the prohibition of the statute of frauds. At a very early period in the history of equity jurisprudence of this State, it was held that equity relieves against a mistake, as well as fraud, and in Gillespie v. Moon (2 J. Ch., 585) where the verbal agreement was to sell 200 acres, and 250 was erroneously included in the conveyance. The grantee took possession, and a decree was granted directing a reconveyance of the excess. The learned Chancellor KENT remarks: "It would be a great defect in what Lord ELDON terms `the moral jurisdiction of the court' if there was no relief for such a case." In Glass v.Hulbert (supra), it is conceded that the principle maintained by Chancellor KENT was fully established, but an attempted distinction was said to exist because the relief sought and granted was by way of restricting, and not by enlarging the operation of the deed. The principle is the same, and equally applicable to both cases, as is apparent from the discussion of the cases by the Chancellor in Gillespie v. Moon (supra). Besides, the subsequent decisions in this State distinctly hold that the same principle was applicable where the conveyance or agreement did not include all the land which was intended. (Wiswall v. Hall, 3 Paige, 313; De Peyster v. Hasbrouck,
1 Kern., 582; Welles v. Yates,
If the views expressed can be upheld, the refusals of the *585 court to instruct the jury as requested were not erroneous. We think that there is no such variance between the complaint and the proofs, as to the representations made, as to authorize a reversal of the judgment; and, after an examination of the several questions raised as to the admissibility of evidence, we are not able to discover any error in the rulings which seriously affected the defendant.
The judgment was right and must be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.