270 Mass. 386 | Mass. | 1930
This is an action of tort to recover damages for false representations alleged to have been made by the defendant’s agent by which the plaintiff was induced to buy an automobile from the defendant. The case was tried in the Superior Court by a judge and a jury. The defendant made a motion that a verdict be directed for it which was denied and the defendant excepted. There was a verdict for the plaintiff.
The plaintiff testified to the execution of a written contract dated January 13, 1926, which was introduced in evidence. By it he agreed to buy and the defendant to
The plaintiff testified further to facts which warranted findings that before the contract was executed by the plaintiff and by the defendant acting by its agent, one Elpert, one Donafio, also an agent of the defendant, represented to the plaintiff that the automobile “was a brand new car, taken from [the] . . . floor [of a Portland dealer] and driven from Portland to Boston and put in the defendant’s show room,” and that the plaintiff relied upon the representations “as to the condition of the automobile and that it was a new automobile just driven from Portland and would not . . . [have] purchased it if he had known otherwise.” It was undisputed that the automobile in question was shipped from the factory on April 18, 1925, to a company dealing in automobiles; that it was then a new car; that this company sold it on May 23, 1925, to one Perkins; that it had been in a fire and in September, 1925, Perkins resold it to the dealers; that at that time the entire body above the sill had been burned out; that it was purchased by the defendant from the dealers on October 2, 1925, and was rebuilt and reconditioned for the defendant.
The evidence did not warrant a finding that there was fraud which entered into the making of the contract as distinguished from fraud which was antecedent thereto. This distinction was pointed out in Colonial Development Corp. v. Bragdon, 219 Mass. 170, 174. See also Butler v. Prussian, 252 Mass. 265, 268; Eastern Advertising Co. v. Shapiro, 263 Mass. 228, 232. There was no evidence that there was any misrepresentation as to the contents or meaning of the written instrument or any fraud in its execution.
The defendant contends that, in view of the language of the contract, false representations of its agent antecedent to the making thereof do not lay the foundation for an action of tort for damages.
As a general proposition fraud vitiates every contract at the election of the injured party. Granlund v. Saraf, 263 Mass. 76, 79.
There is another general rule equally well recognized to the effect that when parties without fraud or mistake have reduced their contract to writing, it is presumed to express the final conclusion reached, and all previous or contemporaneous oral discussion or written memoranda are assumed to be rejected or merged in it. Goldenberg v. Taglino, 218 Mass. 357, 359. Spevack v. Budish, 238 Mass. 215, 217. Western Newspaper Union v. Dittemore, 264 Mass. 74, 77. Canton v. Thomas, 264 Mass. 457, 459. It is this principle which has been held applicable in the group of cases already cited and illustrated by Colonial Development Corp. v. Bragdon, supra, although in them there were also express agreements relating to representations. These cases constitute no exception to the general rule that fraud vitiates every contract at the election of the injured party. It does not authorize parties to attempt to provide by written contract that there shall be no liability for fraud.
In the case at bar the agreement did not provide that all inducements to the making thereof were set forth in it. The action is not brought on the contract or for a violation of its terms. The plaintiff is seeking in this action not to change the “terms and conditions of sale” or to prove that there was a guaranty as to the year when the automobile was made but to recover in tort for the defendant’s fraud in inducing him to agree to the terms of the written agreement. The words “as >is” in the contract
The judge was right in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant, and no error appears in his refusal to give the requested rulings to which exceptions were saved. The duty of the buyer to inspect when opportunity is given was sufficiently explained to the jury.
The bill of exceptions states that» counsel for the defendant directed the attention of the judge to that part of the charge to the jury pertaining to the construction of the written agreement. The judge declined to change his charge and the defendant duly excepted. It does not clearly appear that the attention of the judge was directed to any particular thing he said concerning the construction of the contract nor did the defendant specify what change in the charge should be made. Upon this state of the record no valid exception to the charge seems to have been saved. If it be assumed that the objection was intended to be to the part of the charge in which the judge submitted to the jury the decision of the question whether the parties intended that previous representations should be merged in the written agreement with the direction that they return a verdict for the defendant unless they found that the parties did not so intend, the defendant has suffered no harm. The verdict was based upon the false representations, and, in so far as the jury were permitted by this ruling to pass upon a question of law, they correctly decided that the false representations were not merged in the written agreement.
The plaintiff excepted to the refusal of the judge to rule that he was entitled to recover, in addition to damages proved, interest thereon from the date of the writ. The plaintiff is seeking not to recover money paid out by him but an unliquidated sum equal to the difference between the value of the automobile received and its value if it had been as represented. Damages in deceit do not become a definite obligation until the verdict or finding is recorded.
Exceptions overruled.