87 Mo. App. 256 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
Plaintiff owned certain lots in Carter-ville, Jasper-county, Missouri, and defendant owned a farm ill Barton county. An exchange was agreed upon and consummated in Jasper county as follows:
Plaintiff deeded her lots to defendants and executed her note to them for $1,000, and also assumed in defendants’ deed to'her, certain incumbrances on defendants’ farm amounting
We have no doubt as to the correctness of the equitable principle adopted and enforced by the trial court. It can make no difference whether plaintiff’s claim can be technically designated as a simple vendor’s lien. Certain it is that she is entitled to the aid of a court of equity to enforce her claim against the lands she parted with in exchange for the property she got of defendants. Plaintiff’s claim is, in effect, the claim of a vendor. Pratt v. Clark, 57 Mo. 189. The transaction was, substantially, a sale of her Carterville lots at a price which she, in reality, failed to receive by the sum claimed by her. Florida v. Morrison, 44 Mo. App. 529. And her equitable relief will not be barred by her right to sue on the covenant of warranty in the deed to her. A vendor’s lien can exist concurrently with a legal remedy. Pratt v. Clark, supra. Especially will equity grant relief when the legal remedy is inadequate. As, for instance, when, as here, the party complained of is insolvent. Harper v. Rosenberger, 56 Mo. App, 388.
In this case the lands were situated in a different county from that where the exchange was made and the records of liens were, of course, in that county, while the incumbrances themselves (deeds of trust) were held in the city of St. Louis, nearly four hundred miles from the parties. In such circumstances defendants knew that plaintiff could not well ascertain the true condition of affairs for herself and plaintiff was jus
It is next suggested that no willful design to defraud plaintiff was shown against defendants. This was not necessary. If plaintiff’s grievance is left unredressed it will be a fraud upon her notwithstanding a lack of intention on defendants’ part. They must be held to have intended the inevitable consequence of their acts. Florida v. Morrison, supra. And in this connection it is said that defendants’ representations were innocently made, through mistake, without knowledge of their falsity and with no intention to deceive. In such case say defendants, the decree is not justified, citing Dulaney v. Rogers, 64 Mo. 203. The language relied upon in that case was written in reference to a personal action of deceit for damages. A case unlike this. But even in such case, if one asserts, as of his own knowledge, a material matter for the truth when he does not know whether it is true or false he will be liable for deceit if it be false. It can make no difference if we concede that there was. an innocent mistake made by defendants. Their innocence ceases when apprised of the wrong they have done and they refuse to rectify it. In such cases as this it is not a question of willful and designing fraud, but rather a question whether a fraud will result to plaintiff if she be put off without redress.
Among defendants’ objections to the decree, is that it is premature — that it could not be rightfully rendered until plaintiff had been ousted by reason of the incumbrance, or had paid it. The objection is not well taken. The reason given for sustaining the rule that one can not resort to his covenant of warranty for substantial damages on account of a superior title is, that he may never be disturbed, and if, before being ousted, 'he be allowed to recover the consideration money which he has paid, it may result in his having both the money and land. Pence v. Gabbert, 63 Mo. App. 302. But here there is a
A full consideration of defendants’ brief and argument in support thereof has not convinced us of the soundness of the points urged. The judgment will be affirmed.