186 Mo. App. 221 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
— The plaintiff is a foreign corporation authorized to do business in Missouri. The defendant for the past three years has resided in Stoddard county in this State. In December, 1910, the plaintiff owned several thousand acres of land in Stoddard county and surrounding counties in southeast Missouri. On December 31, 1910, the defendant paid to one W. Ross McKnight one hundred dollars as a part payment for eighty acres of land in Stoddard county which was then owned'by the plaintiff, and took a receipt so stating, which receipt also contained a memorandum of purchase. The total price to be paid was thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents per acre. The vendor, the plaintiff, according to the memorandum, agreed to clear twenty acres of the tract at seven dollars and fifty cents per acre, this amount to be added to the purchase price. The first payment was to be oneténth of the entire purchase price and was to be paid on or before January 10, 1911, and the remainder of the purchase price was to be paid in eight equal annual
Defendant’s answer admitted plaintiff’s right to possession but denied tbat plaintiff was entitled to any damages, and set up a ground for affirmative relief, asking that tbe unpaid notes and tbe deed of trust be canceled, and further, tbat be be given damages sustained by him on account of certain fraudulent representations made to him by W. Ross McKnight through whom be was induced to purchase tbe land from plaintiff.
Tbe court gave plaintiff judgment for possession, and on defendant’s behalf ordered a cancelation of tbe unpaid notes and deed of trust and gave him judgment for $586.10 which represented tbe amount defendant bad paid on tbe purchase price together with tbe taxes be bad paid and interest on such amount.
The defendant saw the advertisements of W. Ross McKnight’s scheme printed in one of the St. Louis, daily newspapers. He was a clerk working in East St. Louis on a salary and was not familiar with farming or agricultural land and so informed McKnight. He called on McKnight after reading the advertisement and received a prospectus' of the scheme and a circular with McKnight’s name stamped upon it. This circular was one put out by the plaintiff, a number of them having been turned over to McKnight by Collins when they perfected the arrangement to deed the lands. The
Defendant went with McKnight and looked over the land on a rainy day when the soil appeared black or dark. The natural color of the soil when dry was light. Defendant says, and we have no reason for doubting him, that W. Ross McKnight made the following representations which were relied on by him and which induced him to become a purchaser: That the lands were all well drained, and that this was not true. That arrangements had been made with the Iron Mountain Railway Company to place an agency at Reeds Spur which was very near plaintiff’s property, and that at the time of the trial, which was several years after the representation was made by McKnight, no such agency had been estabished. That this land would not overflow, and that it does overflow.
• We are convinced after reading the evidence that these representations were'untrue and were false and that McKnight knew they were false or did not have sufficient knowledge on the subject to warrant him in asserting that they were true. This brings his conduct within the rule laid down in Ray County Savings Bank v. Hutton, 224 Mo. l. c. 70, 123 S. W. 47, that a statement'made carelessly without caring whether it be
It is true that a great many of the representations made by McKnight to defendant were in the nature of promises or descriptions of what would take place, and others that would probably escape criticism in an action for fraud and deceit because they were mere “puffing,” and these of course standing alone would not sustain a charge of fraud. But where statements of existing facts are made by one knowing them to be untrue, or made carelessly, not caring whether they are true or false, followed by one being induced thereby to part with money to his damage, this will sustain an action for fraud and deceit. It is no answer to say that McKnight had faith in his project or believed in his scheme or that he himself lost a large sum of money in trying to put it through. Such a defense would make possible the perpetration of the most flagrant frauds and permit the wrongdoers to go free because he would say he believed what he was saying. Ordinary, sensible men require something of substance on which to base belief and not a mere fancy or an imagination; an expression based on such “belief” amounts to recklessness.
In order to hold plaintiff for McKnight’s fraudulent representations we must examine the relation that existed between them. Collins was the alter ego of the plaintiff in this matter and he says that W. Ross McKnight sold this property to defendant as the agent of the plaintiff and that plaintiff paid him a commission for making the sale. McKnight was the only party that defendant dealt with, and it was McKnight who delivered plaintiff’s warranty deed and carried out the contract made on December 31st, evidenced by'the receipt showing that the lands were owned by plaintiff
There can be no reasonable distinction drawn between a tort brought on through fraud and one brought on through negligence. The principal or master is held where the transaction was concerning his business and from the' doing of which he derives benefit.
Appellant contends that in this action of ejectment brought by it, where only title and possession of land is in issue, the defendant will not be permitted to answer by an equitable counterclaim basing his claim on the fraud alleged in the purchase of the land and seeking a cancelation of the unpaid notes for the balance and the deed of trust and the further affirmative relief by way of damages sustained on account of the fraud. Defendant’s counterclaim set up the entire transaction and prayed for a cancelation. The land had already gone back to the plaintiff and the defendant made no claim to it either as to the title or the possession. The offer to return, therefore, that which he received was of necessity done away with, and he was acquiescing in plaintiff taking it back which it had done. Therefore, in order to get rescission, a cancellation and a return of the purchase money and the twelve dollars and twenty-eight cents paid as taxes while defendant owned the land, it was only necessary for him to show that a material misrepresentation which induced him to purchase had been made. For this remedy he was
The land in this case was the subject of plaintiff’s action. The counterclaim of defendant was connected with that subject-matter, and hence, under section 1807, Revised Statutes 1909, a proper item for counterclaim. Bliss on Code Pleading (3 Ed.), section 126, page 215, defines “subject of the action” as follows: “Thus, in an action to recover the possession of land, the ‘right’ is the right of possession; the ‘wrong’ is the dispossession; the ‘object’’is to obtain possession; and the ‘subject,’ or that in regard to which the action is brought, is the land, and usually its title.” It is held in the case of Lane v. Dowd, 172 Mo. l. c. 173, 174, 72 S. W. 632, that the subject-matter of the action in an ejectment suit is the land, and that different transactions, if connected with the subject-matter of the action, can be joined in a petition or set up as a counterclaim. [See, also, Grimes v. Miller, 221 Mo. l. c. 639, 640, 121 S. W. 21.] In an action to replevin a piano, a possessory action for personal property similar to ejectment for land, it is held that the piano is the subject-matter of the action. [Small v. Speece, 131 Mo. App. 513, 110 S. W. 7.]
Appellant contends that defendant did not act promptly enough after discovering that the alleged fraudulent representations had been made by McKnight, and calls attention to a number of letters introduced in evidence written by defendant to McKniglit and Collins with reference to the improvements being-made, the roads, the slough, and the sale of the “back” forty acre tract. Defendant testified that when he bought the eighty acres McKnight agreed to relieve him of the “back” forty, and some of his correspondence relates to that. In one letter written as late as December, 1911, he said he liked the country and wanted to stay there. On May 7, 1912, a year and four months
Appellant cites cases holding that — “Unreasonable delay, especially if accompanied with acts which recognize the contract as in existence, will be construed as condoning the fraud and acquiescing in the validity of the contract. [Harms v. Wolf, 114 Mo. App. 387, 395, 89 S. W. 1037; Lierheimer v. Insurance Co., 122 Mo. App. 374, 381, 99 S. W. 525.]”
There is, however, nothing in the record which shows that plaintiff in any way suffered or changed its position by the delay on defendant’s part to assert his rights growing out of the fraud. Such being the case— the delay not having caused an altered position of the parties — this would not be a bar on the principle of laches. [Newman v. Newman, 152 Mo. 398, 54 S. W. 19; Bradshaw v. Yates, 67 Mo. 221.] In the case of Short v. Thomas, 178 Mo. App. l. c. 419, 420, 163 S. W. 252, we said: “It has been often held that lapse of time short of the period fixed by the Statute of Limitations will not bar equitable relief where the right is clear and there are no countervailing circumstances” citing Cantwell v. Crawley, 188 Mo. 44, 86 S. W. 251; Summers v. Abernathy, 234 Mo. l. c. 167, 136 S. W. 289; Lindell Real Estate Co. v. Lindell, 142 Mo. l. c. 79, 43 S. W. 369; and Spurlock v. Sproule, 72 Mo. l. c. 511. See, also, 6 Cyc. 301. We therefore hold that since defendant was unacquainted with the country to which he had. moved as well as the very business he had engaged in, the delay of one year and four months did not make him guilty of laches. The most that can