90 Mo. App. 25 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1901
Plaintiff traded to defendant a stock of goods, wares and merchandise, located in Chillicothe, Livingston county, for a farm of 320 acres lying and situated in tbe adjoining county of Linn. Sometime after plaintiff delivered
Prior to this trade, the plaintiff and defendant undertook a trade of 160 acres lying near the land in controversy for the same stock of goods, and plaintiff had been over the 160 and could see a part of this land, though he says a very small part, and that he took no notice of it. That trade was never consummated and, afterwards, defendant, who lived in Brookfield, Linn county, sent his agent to Chillicothe to make the trade which has brought on this litigation.
By the terms of the trade, the value of the stock of goods was to be ascertained in a specified manner which was carried out and resulted in a valuation of $10,300. The land was valued at $32.50 per acre.
A considerable part of the briefs is devoted to a proposition of law which grew out of the fact that defendant or his agent had no knowledge of the value of the land or its general characteristics or the improvements thereon. Now, the rule is as stated, in substance, in plaintiff’s brief and affirmed, or admitted, in one of defendant’s instructions, viz.: If one makes a material misrepresentation knowing it is not true; or makes a material statement as true, without knowing whether it is true or false and it turns out to be false, and the other party relies upon it and is thereby induced to trade, he is guilty of a fraud upon that party. And this rule applies, of course, though the false statements are made, as in this ease, by an agent. Shinnabarger v. Shelton & Lane, 41 Mo. App. 147; McBeth v. Craddock, 28 Mo. App. 380; Caldwell v.
In this case, there was ample, evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury and there is enough in the récord to uphold the judgment, unless it be the following consideration:
It is a rule of law applied to adults, when dealing witli matters which men in ordinary life commonly understand, that they must look out for themselves when engaged in a trade with an antagonist. The rule is partly founded upon the common experience of men, which is that they depend upon their own judgment and opinion instead of that of those whose self-interest is against them. Cahn v. Reid, 18 Mo. App. 127; Mires, v. Summerville, 85 Mo. App. 183. It was stated by Judge Breeze in Miller v. Craig, 36 Ill. 109, that a person 'Tas the right to exalt the value of his own property to the highest point his antagonist’s credulity will bear, and depreciate that of the opposing party. This is the daily practice, and no one has ever supposed that such boastful assertions, or highly exaggerated descriptions, amounted to a misrepresentation.”
The rule, however, does not apply to all situations or conditions which may arise in contractual dealing. “The law does not absolutely preclude one from trusting in another in regard to those things which that other has the means of knowing, and the one is not in a position to know or ascertain the truth from his own observation. If from the character, situation or surroundings of the thing traded for, one party is compelled to trust the representations of the other, and reposing special confidence in him for that purpose, relies on his proffered representations, being precluded, from the situation of the property, from giving it his personal observation, or from its character, being unable to judge of it, the law will protect him in the trust he reposes in the opposite party.” Cahn v. Reid, supra.
Defendant complains of a ruling by the trial court which is claimed to be, and might be thought to be, unfair. Plaintiff was permitted to show that the land was not worth $32.50 per acre, the contract valuation, while defendant was refused his offer to show that the merchandise he got of plaintiff was not worth the contract value of $10,300. But the plaintiff attacked the land value by charging fraud and misrepresentation, while defendant made no such charge as to the merchandise and did not deny but that the value was fixed and ascertained as prescribed by the contract. The issue in the cause was defendant’s fraudulent misrepresentations upon which plaintiff relied. No counter-charge of fraud committed by plaintiff was set up. The ruling was therefore proper.
An examination of the entire record, with points made therein by defendant, has satisfied us that we have no sufficient reason to interfere with the judgment and it is affirmed.