124 A. 31 | Conn. | 1924
The plaintiff offered to prove that he entered into a contract of purchase for, and purchased of the defendant, the sole agency for the distribution of the Comer Auto Stop Signal device for the State of Connecticut, upon the representations set forth in the complaint and made to him by the defendant; *492 that these representations were false and fraudulent and were made for the purpose of inducing him to enter into this contract; that the plaintiff believed them to be true, and in reliance thereon entered into the contract and paid the defendant in consideration thereof $1,700, and that this device was at the time of the contract valueless.
Two rulings on evidence are made the subject of appeal. One of these representations was that certain States by law compelled the use of this stop-signal device. To the offer of proof of this the defendant objected, because immaterial and that whether or not such laws existed could not be made the basis of a misrepresentation, and also excepted to the ruling admitting this evidence. The ruling was correct. The existence of such laws would tend to indicate the value of this device and might well have been an inducement to the making of the contract. Such a representation is one of fact.
The defendant also excepted to the admission in evidence of an advertisement, on the ground that it had not been sufficiently identified. Counsel were in error as to the failure of identification. The plaintiff had already testified that the defendant called his attention to this advertisement. The advertisement tended to prove that three States required by law the use of this device. The evidence as to whether the defendant had sold his home some time after this contract, as tending to prove a fraudulent intent in the making of this contract, cannot be considered, since the defendant failed to take an exception to the ruling admitting this evidence.
The third error assigned, the overruling of the defendant's motion for a directed verdict, cannot be taken under our practice. "The failure of the trial court to direct a verdict is not in this State assignable error."Kiely v. Ragali,
The fourth assignment of error is the refusal of the court to submit to the jury written interrogatories claimed by the defendant. The brief of the defendant urges: "The purpose of the interrogatories was to protect the defendant against the implications of a general verdict." In Freedman v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co.,
The plaintiff offered evidence to prove that the defendant, well knowing that the representations made to the plaintiff at the time of the execution of the contract were false, executed thereafter a deed, on August 18th, 1920, of his real estate transferring the same to his wife, and held the deed until December 15th, 1920, when the plaintiff threatened trouble, and then, to avoid an attachment, placed the deed on record, and that this transfer was made with a guilty conscience of the fraud and to prevent the plaintiff from recovering his loss.
The court charged the jury concerning this transaction, that "if, however, the transfer was initiated on the seventeenth day of August because the defendant had a guilty conscience, that guilty conscience may be considered by you as some evidence of a guilty intent on his part." The charge is too indefinite upon this subject to have done any harm. It does not reach the point the court attempted to touch upon, and since the defendant made no request to charge upon this matter we are unable to ascertain whether the court committed error or not. The 10th article of the contract provided that "it is expressly understood and agreed that the foregoing memorandum expresses a complete and final understanding between the parties hereto, and that any and all operations, negotiations and representations not herein included are hereby abrogated, this agreement cannot be changed, modified or varied by any promise or representation except it be ratified in writing by the partners of this copartnership and attached to the contract." The charge as made and refused under this article covers errors six, twelve, thirteen and *496 fourteen. The court refused to charge that, "by the expressed terms of the contract in dispute all representations, negotiations and operations not therein included are abrogated and the plaintiff cannot recover for any such alleged misrepresentations not set forth in the contract," and, further, that if the plaintiff read and understood these the verdict should be for the defendant. The court was manifestly right in refusing these requests and in charging the jury that, "the obvious intent of that article was to preserve the contract, no matter what misrepresentation might have been made. . . . Here the plaintiffs are seeking to get their money back by saying that they were induced to part with it by fraud and misrepresentations. The contract was the thing they gave money for, but they are not suing under the contract; consequently the paragraph in this contract does not cover this subject." The construction the defendant contends for would be against public policy. Fraud cannot be contracted against. The authorities cited by the defendant are not in point, being cases of agency.
Errors seven, eight, nine and ten cover the charge as made on the subject of damages. Errors fifteen, sixteen and seventeen cover refusals to charge on this subject.
The charge sufficiently accords with our rule so as to be unobjectionable. Gustafson v. Rustemeyer,
Error nineteen is the refusal to charge that certain of these representations were matters of opinion. There is no merit to the claim. Scholfield Gear Pulley Co.
v. Scholfield,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.