COLE v. CATES et al.
41795
Court of Appeals of Georgia
DECIDED APRIL 15, 1966
REHEARING DENIED APRIL 29, 1966
ARGUED FEBRUARY 7, 1966
Preston M. Almand, Solicitor, for appellee.
Kemp & Watson, John L. Watson, Jr., for appellant.
Huie, Etheridge & Harland, Harry L. Cashin, Jr., for appellee.
PER CURIAM. This is a suit by a licensed real estate broker for commissions, and is the second appearance of this case in this court. For a brief statement of count 1 of the petition, the only count involved on this appeal, see Cole v. Cates, 110 Ga. App. 820 (140 SE2d 36). By amendment, the plaintiffs amended their petition (in accordance with the allegations of defendant‘s answer) to increase the acreage of the land involved and thus increase the amount of commission alleged to be due. The plaintiffs made an oral motion to strike paragraphs 7 and 8, and paragraphs 10 through 20 of the defendant‘s answer on the ground that the said paragraphs failed as a matter of law to constitute a legal defense of fraud. “7. Defendant admits that W. M. McFarland has demanded of him to consummate the sale of his property under said purported contract and that defendant has failed and refused to sell his property under said purported contract because said purported contract was obtained from him
While the Civil Court of Fulton County, when first created as the Municipal Court of Atlanta (Ga. L. 1913, p. 145, et seq.) may not have been a court of record, yet, in view of the amendatory Acts relating to the keeping of minutes, etc. (Sec. 4 of
“The often announced rule that one having the capacity and opportunity to read a written contract and who signs it, not under any emergency, and whose signature is not obtained by any trick or artifice of the other party, but solely on the representations of the other party as to its contents, cannot afterwards set up fraud in the procurement of the signature of the instrument, Truitt-Silvey Hat Co. v. Callaway & Truitt, 130 Ga. 637 (61 SE 481), Lewis v. Foy, 189 Ga. 596 (6 SE2d 788), is but another statement of the rule that one cannot claim to be defrauded by the false representations of another, where, by the exercise of ordinary diligence, such person could have discovered the falsity of the representations before acting thereon; and, . . . there is a wide difference between that class of cases in which one can read and those where one, from illiteracy or ignorance, is unable to read the writing he is induced to sign, and has to rely upon the representations made by the draftsman, Lee v. Loveland, 43 Ga. App. 5 (2b) (157 SE 707), to the extent that one who cannot read ‘may, ordinarily, rely upon the representation of the other party as to what the instrument is, or as to what it contained; and his mere
Judgment affirmed. Bell, P. J., Hall, Eberhardt, Pannell and Deen, JJ., concur. Felton, C. J., Nichols, P. J., Frankum and Jordan, JJ., dissent.
HALL, Judge, concurring. I agree that the law of Georgia is correctly stated in the majority opinion.
The better rule regarding fraud in the factum between the parties was well stated by Lord Chelmsford in Directors &c. of the Central R. Co. of Venezuela v. Kisch, Law Rep., 2 H. L. 99, 120 (1867): “But it appears to me that when once it is established that there has been any fraudulent misrepresentation or wilfull concealment by which a person has been induced to enter into a contract, it is no answer to his claim to be relieved from it to tell him that he might have known the truth by proper inquiry. He has a right to retort upon his objector, ‘You, at least, who have stated what is untrue, or have concealed the truth, for the purpose of drawing me into a contract, cannot accuse me of want of caution because I relied implicitly upon your fairness and honesty.‘” This is also the view in many other jurisdictions. 37 CJS 274, § 530 (c). In seeking to choose between a fraudfeasor and a negligent party, the Georgia law unfortunately goes with the alleged crook.
FELTON, Chief Judge, NICHOLS, Presiding Judge, JORDAN and FRANKUM, Judges, dissenting. We think that the court erred in
The majority opinion is based on the erroneous premise that a legal relationship involving fiduciary duties must be shown to give rise to a confidential relationship. We do not believe that this premise is correct. The showing of a relationship in fact which justifies the reposing of confidence by one party in another is all the law requires.
Ingram v. Rooks, 221 Ga. 701 (146 SE2d 743), cited by the majority, is not authority contrary to the conclusion we reach. All that case holds is that there was no relationship shown which gave the complaining party a right to rely on the representations of a party at arm‘s length at the time of the representations. The fact that a testator trusted a person enough to name him or her as executor or executrix does not constitute a confidential relationship which will authorize a devisee to rely on the representations of one named as executrix before the probate of the will because the devisee cannot base confidential relationship on the reposing of trust in the named executrix by the testator. It is our opinion that the Code sections hereinbefore referred to are not as narrow as the majority contends, and that if any court decision is contrary to the Code sections the Code sections prevail. However, as we construe the decisions, there is not one case which precludes the conclusion we have reached in this case.
