Appellee brought this action against appellants Bimbo Builders, Inc. (hereinafter “Bimbo”) and its president Carl E. Anderson to recover $125,457 plus interest and attorney fees on a note given as partial consideration on certain Cherokee County real estate sold to appellants and to obtain a special lien on that property. Following discovery and a hearing, summary judgment was entered in favor of appellee. Appellants bring this appeal contending that the trial court erred in not finding that their defenses of fraud and lack of consideration presented genuine issues of material fact; they also contend that the trial court improperly failed to review a deposition in the file prior to entering its order granting summary judgment. We find these enumerations to be without merit and affirm.
*281 1. Appellee took the deposition of appellant Anderson individually and in his capacity as president of Bimbo. Anderson acknowledged that the note and an accompanying security deed were properly executed and signed by himself as surety and in his capacity as president of Bimbo. However, Anderson asserted that appellee had grossly misrepresented the condition of the land thereby fraudulently inducing Bimbo to purchase the property. The basis of this assertion was appellee’s submission of a plat to Anderson which purported to accurately represent the topography of the property. Appellants contend that this plat did not accurately portray the property since it failed to set forth several streams and the resulting swampy condition of a portion of the property.
Anderson had been a real estate developer for fourteen years and was developing a contiguous subdivision at the time he purchased the subject property from appellee. At his deposition Anderson testified that, notwithstanding its swampy condition, he would have purchased the property but at a much lower price. He offers appellee’s failure to foreclose on the property under the security deed as evidence that the property was worth considerably less than what Bimbo had agreed to pay.
Although appellee denied him permission to begin putting in streets prior to closing, Anderson had the property surveyed by his own surveyor; this survey was used for the closing. When asked whether he had walked the property prior to closing, Anderson responded, “No, I didn’t walk it. I walked part of it.” The questioning continued: “Q. Is that your practice in your fourteen years of real estate development to buy a piece of property without walking it? A. Whenever you get a plat that don’t show any branches you don’t have any reason to walk it. Now, if it shows swamp you’re going to go see where the swamp’s at. Q. But you had between April the 3rd of 1979 when you signed the contract and May the 18th of 1979 at closing, you had every opportunity to walk it if you wanted to, didn’t you? A. If I had wanted to walk it or if I had had time to walk it I would have.”
“In order to show fraud and misrepresentation in the procurement of the contract as a defense to an action on the contract, it is not sufficient to show that false representations were made, which were known to be false and which were made with the intention to deceive.
It must also be shown that the defendant exercised due care to discover the fraud
and that he relied upon the false representations to his injury.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Dr. Pepper Finance Corp. v.
Cooper,
2. “The [remaining] enumeration is adversely governed as to the appellants] by the recent decision of the Supreme Court in
General Motors Corp. v. Walker,
Judgment affirmed.
