149 P. 540 | Or. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
It appears that Irvin bought the property at a bank-' rupt sale about five years before the trade and built up.a paying business, putting a large part of what he received into improvements, among which were an ice and cold storage plant and a lighting plant costing about $2,000. A short time after the exchange of the properties, the plaintiffs, being dissatisfied, obtained from dealers in second-hand goods a “rough” estimate of the value of the restaurant and lodging-house property, which .valuation was placed at about $2,100. It may be considered that this was probably a very low figure, about one half the value of the properties compared with what they were worth while the café and house were a going concern. We may also concede that the plaintiffs paid a high price for them in the exchange. ■
It shotild be noted at the outset that the representations made by the defendant as to the volume of business transacted by him in the café and lodging-house pertained to the past, and that there was no warranty nor representation as to what the future earnings of the establishment would be. The evidence fails to substantiate the allegations of the complaint as to the fraudulent representations made by the defendant. There are over 450 pages of typewritten testimony in the record, much of which is devoted to describing the
“I am familiar with the restaurant business, and there is nobody can hand me anything on a restaurant or hotel deal, * * because I have had a lifetime at the business.”
This is not noted as an excuse for any fraud on the part of the vendor bnt as tending to indicate that the parties were “dealing at arm’s-length.” The main thing that Black required of Irvin during the negotiations was a statement of what the volume of his business had been during the past year. This Irvin furnished him, and this he alleges to be false. The laboring oar is upon plaintiff to prove the incorrectness of the statement. In this respect he has failed. On the other hand, the evidence of the defendant fairly shows that the receipts of the concern during 1913 were as represented. Irvin did not keep a complete set of account-books, but made a showing before the deal as to the receipts of the business for the year 1913, of the following figures, which were taken from the cash register slips: January, $4,005.45; February, $3,621.25; March, $3,129.80; April, $2,962.35; May, $3,105.69; June, $2,984.20; July, $3,491.55; August, $3,287.25; September, $5,055.10; October, $5,571.75; November, $3,018.10; December to 25, $2,213.80.
Fraud cannot he presumed. It must he alleged and established by the greater weight of the evidence: Keel v. Levy, 19 Or. 450 (24 Pac. 253); Scott v. White, 50 Or. 111 (91 Pac. 487); Allison v. Ward, 63 Mich. 128, (29 N. W. 528). A list of the goods was made, and Black had an opportunity, before the deal, to obtain information in regard to their value. He was in a better position to do this before the deal than were the courts afterward. In Scott v. Walton, 32 Or. 460, at 461 and 462 (52 Pac. 180, at 181), former Mr. Justice Bean states the well-known rule as follows:
“The evidence shows that the negotiations between the parties for the exchange continued some 10 or 15 days before the trade was finally consummated; that plaintiff resides near Lebanon and was acquainted with the property defendant was offering to trade to him, and that he not only had a full opportunity to, hut did actually, examine it before making the exchange. Under such circumstances, the mere statement of the defendant as to its value furnishes no ground for avoiding the contract. The law recognizes*569 the well-known fact that it is characteristic of human nature for the owner, when about to sell his property, to set a high value thereon for the purpose of enhancing it in the'buyer’s estimation; ánd hence, when the parties are dealing at arm’s-length, it does not help a purchaser who accepts and relies upon the vendor’s statements as to value, when no warranty is intended and when the language used is not an affirmation of some specific fact, but the mere expression of opinion.”
See, also, Collins v. Jackson, 54 Mich. 186 (19 N. W. 947).
It is stated in 14 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 ed.), page 118:
“The doctrine is that, when persons are dealing at arm’s-length and on equal terms, mere commendatory expressions as to value, quality, prospects and the like, though exaggerated, cannot be made the basis of a charge of fraud, if there is no representation or concealment of any material fact, and nothing is said or done to prevent the other party from making an examination or investigation for himself.”
The true rule is that a fraudulent misrepresentation cannot itself be the mere expression of an opinion of the person making it. While the vendee has a right to rely on an assertion of fact, he has no right to rely upon the mere expression of an opinion by the vendor in whatever language such expression is made. He is assumed to be as equally able to form his own opinion and come to a correct judgment in respect to the matter as the vendor, and cannot justly claim to have been misled by the opinion, however erroneous it may have been. For this reason the general praise of one’s own property by a seller, commonly called “puffing,” for the purpose of enhancing it in the buyer’s estimation, is always allowed, provided it is kept within reasonable limits, is not a positive affirmation
Sherman v. Glick, 71 Or. 451 (142 Pac. 606), relied upon by plaintiffs, is a case where defendant grossly misrepresented the value of a house and lot to an old lady, poorly educated, and unacquainted with the property and with business, and overreached her to the amount of $1,750. This was held to be a constructive fraud. The case is not in point.
Applying the rules above stated to the issues and evidence in the case at bar, it follows that the decree of the lower court should be reversed and the suit dismissed ; and it is so ordered.
Reversed. Suit Dismissed.