33 N.J. Eq. 111 | New York Court of Chancery | 1880
On the 24th of December, 1877, the complainant, Sarah Cros-land, held the legal title to a tract of land of about eighteen acres, in Landis township, in the county of Cumberland, and, according to the bill of complaint, was the owner thereof. The property was improved. There was on it a dwelling-house, besides other buildings and improvements. It appears to have been worth about $5,500. She also owned certain personal property on the premises, consisting of household furniture in the house,
*116 “ Said he, ‘ Now I will give you one-half interest in it [the royalty] for this property; it will realize you $800 a year — $200 a quarter — and you will receive it in three days after it is due; see what a nice thing that will be for you and your family — and it will get better all the time; the thing is only in its infancy; the company has got $20,000 invested in it, and I would not take $20,000 to-day for the other half of the royalty; I assure you, Crosland, I would not make you such an offer as that if I had not got plenty to live on without it; I’ve got $3,000 a year coming in from other sources, and I am doing a deed of charity to give you half of the royalty; I don’t care about a farm for myself; if I make a trade with you it shall be for my boys to farm and keep them out of mischief; I would build a brick residence up in the peach orchard for myself and wife, and let the boys run the farm; ’ he said the half of that royalty was worth a hundred farms; I said, ‘Mr. Hall, are you telling me the truth?’ ‘Crosland,’ said he, ‘do you suppose I would tell you a lot of lies, and rob you and your children out of your little home? don’t you know I am a member of the church, and in good standing ? ’ He then held up his hands as if he were praying, and said, ‘As*117 God is my judge, Crosland, I wish He may strike me dead if every word I have* told you is not true; I am your friend ; I am none of your Vineland sharks; what I offer you will be a living for you and your children; now, if we make such a trade, I don’t want you to say a word about it to any one, and so long as you are going to Australia with Mr. Stiles, it is nobody’s business ; there are men in this town [Vineland] who envy me because I can live without work; they would like to know my business, but I will not tell it to them; now if you will come down town with me, we will go to E. M. Turner’s [Mr. Turner was a lawyer in Vineland] office, and get the tiling fixed up;’ I said ‘Now, Mr. Hall, if I make a trade with you, and all is true what you have told me, how am I to get to Australia?’ Hall said, ‘I value my royalty at $6,000, and you value your place at $5,500; I’ll lend you $500 to pay your way to Australia; you have a mortgage on your place for $400 ; the $500 I lend you and the $400 on the place will make $900; now, Crosland, I won’t be hard on you; I will give you a good chance; I will let you receive the royalty for two years — then the $500 I loan you and the $400 will be stopped out of the royalty, and then the royalty is yours again.’ ” »
Crosland adds:
“ Well, of course I agreed to trade him ; he was to give me the $500 when we got to the house, or bring it with him; it was to be cash when the deed was made.”
Crosland further says that in Major Walker’s office, when the papers were exchanged, be asked Walker what he thought of the trade he had made, and Walker said that it “ was too mueh like a lottery, those patent plasters,” and Hall replied, “ Major Walker, I am giving Crosland what will be a living for himself and family, and it will realize him from $300 to $500 a quarter and Crosland is, as before stated, corroborated on this point by Major Walker. Those statements made by Hall as to the amount which he had derived and was deriving from the half of the royalty which he was selling to Crosland, were untrue to his knowledge. He had knowledge on the subject, and Crosland had none, and his asseverations of the truth of his statements were calculated and designed to induce Crosland to rely on them. The misrepresentation was a gross fraud, and is sufficient ground for setting aside the conveyance and transfer of Mrs. Crosland’s property. Hall and his wife have not attempted to show that the half of the royalty had any value whatever, but, on the hearing, relied on the want of proof on the subject of value or pro-