60 So. 495 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
The appellee brought this suit against the appellant on the common counts for money had and received, and while -the case was pending in the city court of Montgomery on appeal from the inferior court of Montgomery the pleadings hereinafter referred to were filed and rulings made that we shall discuss.
The defendant filed a plea of the general issue and numerous special pleas, among other pleas setting up the “investment contract” under the terms and conditions of which the plaintiff paid the money sought to be recovered to the defendant in this suit. The special pleas last mentioned allege that the money paid by the plaintiff to the defendant and sought to be recovered
To these pleas the plaintiff filed a special replication (No. 2), alleging that the contract set up in the pleas was procured under such circumstances as to amount to a fraud in law, and that he had exercised his privilege of avoiding the contract, and had rescinded, or offered to rescind, the same before suit brought. The facts and circumstances set out in this replication and relied on as avoiding the contract for fraud are in substance as follows: That the defendant’s agent falsely and fraudulently with intent to deceive represented to the plaintiff at the time that he applied for the contract on May 11, 1910, that if the plaintiff would mate application for
It appears from the allegations of the replication that the false representation of material fact relied upon as constituting the fraud upon the plaintiff which in
The plaintiff, under the rulings, made in the cases of S. L. & T. Co. v. Gissendaner, 4 Ala. App. 523, 58 South. 737, and Prestwood v. Carlton, 162 Ala. 332, 50 South. 254, was not required to read the contract, but had the right to rely, in the absence of anything that would arouse suspicion or invite investigation, on the representation of the defendant’s agent and void the effect of the contract because of the misrepresentation and fraud practiced on him.
The plaintiff would, however, be required to exercise his right of rescission because of this fraudulent misrepresentation within a reasonable time and with due promptness after the fraud was discovered, or ought to have been discovered. — Young. v. Arntze & Bros., 86 Ala. 116, 5 South. 253. The contract was voidable if procured by misrepresentation of a material fact tantamount to a fraud, but the law imposes certain well-defined limitations on the right of rescission, and, when one is put upon notice of the falsity of the statements that induced him to enter into the contract, he must, if he desires to avoid the contract because of the fraud practiced on him, act seasonably in rescinding the contract and make restoration of what he has received, or show it was worthless, or that restoration is futile or had been waived. He cannot at the same time both assail his contract and retain its fruits, and claim benefits under it. — Rabbitte v. Ala. Gt. So. Ry. Co., 158 Ala. 431, 47 South. 573; Davis, Moody & Co. v. Betz & Callman, 66 Ala. 206.
The false representation of the terms or contents of the contract, to be available and of benefit to the pleader, must have been the statement of a fact, and not the expression of judgment, or a mere conclusion or opinion. — Townsend v. Cowles, 31 Ala. 428; Davis v. Betz, 66 Ala. 206; Joseph v. Decatur Co., 102 Ala. 346, 14 South. 739.
The plaintiff is shown by the allegations of the pleadings to have had the contract in his possession at the time he demanded and was refused the loan at the end of the six months, and this refusal was sufficient to put him on inquiry or invite investigation as to whether or not the fact that the contract contained such a provision as represented by the agent and relied upon by him was true. If he was prevented from doing this, or otherwise induced to continue to rely on the original representation without knowledge of its falsity by the further persuasions and undue influence of the defendant’s agent, whom he trusted because of special relations of confidence, this was matter that the plaintiff must have set
The averments of the replication, as tested by the demurrers aimed at it, and construed under the established rule that it is to be taken most strongly against the pleader, show that the plaintiff failed to seasonably offer to rescind and avoid the contract after knowledge of the fact that the representation that induced the plaintiff to take the contract was false. Not only so, but the averments show, on the contrary, that the plaintiff continued to claim under the contract for three months after ascertaining the falsity of the representation that induced him to apply for and take the contract.
The principle invoked by the appellant in this case, that the right to rescind for fraud must be asserted promptly and unreservedly at the earliest practical moment after discovery of the fraud, or of such facts as are sufficient to put the party defrauded on notice thereof, has been applied by the Supreme Court of this state to cases presenting various kinds of contracts. — Harrison v. Ala. Mid., Ry. Co., 144 Ala. 246, 257, 40 South. 394, 6 Ann. Cas. 804; Stephenson v. Allison, 123 Ala. 439, 26 South. 290; Elliott v. Howison, 146 Ala. 568, 40 South. 1018; Dean, Adm’r v. Oliver, 131 Ala. 634, 30 South. 865; Allgood v. Bank of Piedmont, 115 Ala. 418, 22 South. 35; Coleman v. Bank, 115 Ala. 307, 22 South. 84; Romanoff v. Cameron, 137 Ala. 214, 33 South. 864; Young v. Arntze & Bros., 86 Ala. 116, 5 South. 253; Birmingham R. R. Co. v. Jordan, 170 Ala. 530, 54 South. 280; Kilpatrick v. Henson, 81 Ala. 465, 1 South. 188.
The allegations of the replication numbered 3 are ■subject to the same vice. The replications, applying to them the proper rule of construction, that averments
We have examined the entire record in this case under the suggestion of appellee’s counsel that, if the court’s rulings on the demurrers to the replications are held to be erroneous, it is error without injury. Possibly we may, after having read the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions, be able to concede that there is some merit in the contention of counsel for the appellee that “on the merits of the case common justice is on his (plaintiff’s) side,” but defects in the pleading are not cured by evidence supplying the omission of matter
The essence of law is that it shall operate generally, and geperal rules should not be tortured out of shape by a construction to meet special exigencies.
The hardships imposed by an improvident contract will not of themselves justify rescission or authorize relief at the hands of the court. — Sheldon v. Birmingham Co., 121 Ala. 278, 25 South. 820. There is a line of well considered cases holding that under circumstances where confidential or fiduciary relations exist between the parties, or where the party defrauded has been led to do something inconsistent with his right to rescind superinduced by the fraud or artifice of the other party upon whom he relied due to the confidence reposed in such person growing out of some special relation existing between them, that the party defrauded having been disarmed in consequence of these conditions is not to be denied his right of rescission when otherwise he would. The replications to which demurrers were overruled do not contain averments involving
We are unable to say, after examining the whole transcript, that the erroneous rulings on the pleadings that involve but are not in harmony with the principles of law we have discussed, are without injury, and the case must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.