113 Iowa 462 | Iowa | 1901
The foregoing are the facts necessary for an understanding of the questions of law involved in the case. The general legal proposition on which plaintiff’s action rests is that false and fraudulent representation made, with knowledge of their falsity, by one person to another, and relied on by the latter to his injury, render the person making such rep-resentations liable to him in damages for the injury thus resulting. The necessary elements of this legal wrong, for which a court of law gives redress in an action for deceit, are: (1) False representations by defendant, upon which plaintiff had the right to rely; (2) knowledge of their falsity on the part of defendant; and (3) injury to plaintiff resulting from his reliance thereon.
But even this statement of the law would not help out the instructions which we are now considering. There are cases decided hy other courts extending the rule of liability beyond that recognized in this state. See Holcomb v. Noble, 69 Mich. 396 (37 N. W. Rep. 497); Totten v. Burhans, 91 Mich. 495 (51 N. W. Rep. 1119) ; Trimble v. Reid, 97 Ky. 713 (31 S. W. Rep. 861); Foard v. McComb, 75 Ky. 723 ; Foster v. Kennedy's Adm'r, 38 Ala. 359. But these cases are wrong in principle. The question is not whether defendant has made representations which amount to an implied warranty, or whether the contract ought to be rescinded in equity, or whether the defendant has attempted to- gain an unconscionable advantage; for these matters are subject of investigation and redress in different forms of action. Stone v. Denny, 4 Metc. (Mass.) 151; Cameron v. Mount, 86 Wis. 477 (56 N. W. Rep. 1094, 22 L. R. A. 512); Smith v. Bricker, 86 Iowa, 285; Hunter v. Safety Cure Co., 96 Iowa, 573.
In the case of Kountze v. Kennedy, 147 N. Y. 129 (41 N. E. Rep. 414, 29 L. R. A. 363), it is said: “Misjudganent, however gross, or want of caution, however marked, is not fraud. Intentional fraud, as distinguished from a
To hold that defendant, in an action of deceit, is liable for false statements, the falsity of which he might have, known by investigation, bnt which he in fact believed to be true, is to- put a liability on one for what he says in good faith, under circumstances not making it his duty to make any statement whatever. The lack of uniformity in the rules on this question, recognized by courts which have departed from the old and established landmarks, is a warning that certainty in the law is only to be- preserved by adhering to the requirement that the complaining party shall show knowledge of the falsity complained of. If liability in such cases is to be predicated on the question whether the party making the representation might have known of its falsity, then the greatest uncertainty must result as to how much opportunity for knowledge is necessary to render him liable, and there would be no definite rule possible without adopting the broad proposition that every statement made by one person to another with regard to a business transaction involves a warranty of its truthfulness, which is further than we feel justified in going, either on reason or authority.
It seems to us that the rule in this state has not been departed from or enlarged in Hubbard v. Weave, 79 Iowa, 678, but, on the contrary, is there fully recognized. That, however, was an equitable action, and therefore it was competent for the court to consider what evidence was sufficient, in its judgment, to show knowledge of. the falsity of the statements relied upon. It is one thing to hold as a matter of fact that from certain evidence the court will find knowledge to have existed in a particular case, and, on the other hand, to charge the jury that such facts, as a matter of laAV, render the defendant liable, without a finding of knowledge as a fact. Atkins v. Elwell, 45 N. Y., 753.