Culver v. Smith

82 Mo. App. 390 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900

SMITH, B. J.

The petition is in two counts, in the first of which it is alleged that the plaintiff was the owner of certain real estate in Kansas City, in this state, describing the same, and that the defendants were the owners of 400 shares, being the entire capital stock, of the Kansas City & Southern Lumber Company; that the defendants falsely represented that the said corporation had the title to 8,700 acres of land situated in the state of Arkansas, and-that, relying upon said false representations the plaintiff made a contract with the defendants by which they agreed to -transfer to 'the plaintiff 300 shares of stock in said corporation; that in pursuance of said contract, -and in consideration of said stock in said -corporation, -the plaintiff conveyed to the defendants the property owned by him in Kansas City; that the title to 600 acres of the lands represented by defendants to be owned by the corporation had failed, -and that thereby the plaintiff’s stock depreciated to the extent -o-f $6,000. Judgment was demanded -against the defendants for $6,000 and that his veindor’s lien be enforced against the said real estate co-nveyed by *394him to the defendants. And the other is a duplicate of the first, except that i't is therein alleged that 'H. A. Culver owned certain other real estate in Kansas City, and that 'he made a contract with defendants for the exchange of -the said real estate for 100 shares of stock in said corporation, and that by reason of the failure of the title to the aforesaid 600 acres his said stock was depreciated in the sum of $6,000, 'and that he had assigned “his claim agiainst the said defendants” for a vendor’s lien on account of “the failure of the title” to the plaintiff. Judgment was demanded for this sum of $6,000 and for the enforcement of a vendor’s lien.

The answer contained numerous’ admissions and denials which need not, in this connection, be referred to. There was a trial and decree for the plaintiff. Defendants appealed.

During the progress of the trial the contract referred to in the petition was introduced in evidence by plaintiff which recited, (1), that the stockholders in the said Lumber Company (who are defendants herein), transferred the 400 shares of stock in said Lumber Company to E. "W. Culver and H. A. Culver, which stock represented 8,700 acres of land owned by said Lumber Company, etc.; (2), that the consideration to be paid by said Culvers for said 400 shares of stock was the transfer to said stockholders of certain real estate in Kansas City — describing it,; (3), that the said stockholders agreed that the title of said lumber company to said 7,800 acres of land “was good and sufficient title to hold'said land.”

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant interposed a demurrer thereto on the ground that if a/ny right of action had accrued “it was a joint' action of the two Culvers and that they must both join in the suit.” This was by the court overruled and the action of the court in that regard is ‘assigned here as reversible error.

The ground upon which the plaintiff bases his claim for equitable relief is that by means of the fraudulent representations of defendants a's to the title to said 8,700 acres of land, *395plaintiff and H. A. Culver were induced to enter into said contract; that they were induced thereby to enter into a contract by which they agreed to accept a conveyance of said ■ Arkansas real estate, which invested them with no title to a part thereof, and to convey to defendants, as a consideration therefor, the title to their own real estate. "Whether or not the plaintiff can prosecute this action without joining H. A. Culver as a party plaintiff wit-h him depends upon the construction to be placed upon the contract.

It was said, by Mr. Justice Redfield in Sharp v. Conklin, 16 Yermont, 355, that, “the rule is perfectly established that where the interest in the subject-matter secured by a covenant is several, although the terms will naturally bear a joint interpretation, yet if they do not exclude the inference of being intended to be several they shall be so taken; they shall have a several construction put upon them.” In Parsons on Contracts, 18, it is stated: “The üature and especially the entireness of the consideration is of the greatest importance in determining whether the promise be joint or several, for if it moves from many persons jointly the promise of repayment is joint, but if from many persons, but from each severally, then it is several.” Judge Bliss in section 63 of his work on Code Pleading, in speaking of the effect of the rule requiring the real party in interest to sue, upon eases where the obligation is to more than one, that is, where the 'Contract seems to be made to the obligees jointly, but the money to be paid or the thing to bo done for the benefit of each is specified, observes: “This is spoken of as a joint interest because by the form of the agreement the obligation to them is joint, although there is no joint interest in the benefit to be derived from it.” . .

It is the well-settled role of law in this state that when an obligation has been executed to two jointly they must both sue upon it. One of two joint obligees, without the concurrence of the other can not sue upon a joint contract, unless *396both agree there ca,n he no action upon it. Clark v. Cable, 21 Mo. 225; Rainey v. Smizer, 28 Mo. 311; Ryan v. Riddle, 78 Mo. 523; Dewey v. Carey, 60 Mo. 224; Ohnsorg v. Turner, 33 Mo. App. 487; Muldrow v. Railway, 62 Mo. App. 431; McLaran v. Wilhelm, 50 Mo. App. 658; Cross v. Williams, 72 Mo. 580; Parks v. Richardson, 35 Mo. App. 197. And there is nothing in the present practice 'act which 'affects the law of joint contracts. That act deals only with the mode of procedure and does not affect the law of contráete 'as it existed prior to its enactment. Clark v. Cable, ante. The statute in this regard has remained unchanged since the decision just referred to. R. S. 1889’, secs. 1994, 2047; Laws of 1848-49, p. 76, sec. 7; R. S. 1855, p. 1218, sec. 5; Laws of 1848-49, p. 80, sec. 6; R. S. 1855, p. 1231, sec. 10.

Here the contract shows that the obligation of the defendants to the Culvers was joint and the consideration to pass from the latter to the former was joint and not several. It was not specified in the contract of the Culvers in consideration of the joint promise to them, each would convey his individual or separate real estate to the defendants; or, in other words, the contract does not disclose that the consideration for the promise of the defendants to the Culvers was several. The consideration, it clearly appears, was the joint conveyance by them to the defendants of certain real estate. Had it been disclosed by the contract that the consideration for the promise was a conveyance of certain parts of said real estate by each of the Culvers, or that defendants were obligated to' convey to each of the Culvers a specified part of said lands, or a specified number of shares each in said lumber company, then, according to the rale announced by the authorities referred to> an action could he prosecuted in the name of each of the Culvers in his own behalf. It seems to us that the terms of the contract here in issue most manifestly bear a joint interpretation and exclude the inference of being intended to be several. The rule requiring, where an obligation is executed to two jointly, *397that both must sue upon it, is, we think, applicable to the present case. It follows from these observations -that we are unable to approve the action taken by the circuit court on the defendants’ demurrer.

It is further insisted by the defendants that .there was no evidence adduced tending to prove any fraudulent representations were made to plaintiff by them, or either of them, and for that reason plaintiff ought not to have recovered. The petition, as has been seen, alleged that the defendants falsely and fraudulently represented to plaintiff that the said lumber company had title to said 8,700 acre's of Arkansas lands, when it had title to only 8,000 acres, and that the title to 600 acres thereof was in other parties and claimed adversely by them, and that in consequence thereof the title to said 600 acres had failed. It was admitted by the answer that defendant represented to plaintiff that the lumber company had title to the said 8,700 ácres of land, and that the title to 240 acres thereof was not vested in the lumber company at the time the exchange was made. The contract itself recites that the lumber company had title to the 8,700 acres of land. It stands admitted by the pleadings not only that the representations as to title were made, but that,the same were at least in part untrue. So' that the trial court was justified by the admissions in the pleadings and the evidence in finding that the representations were made and that the same were false..

The common law action for deceit rests upon a fraudulent motive, a scienter, an intent to cheat or deceive. In actions like this, the fraudulent representations which will entitle the plaintiff to relief need not be of that strict character which is necessary to support a common law action for deceit. Where a party to a bargain makes to the other party a statement of a material fact, which he either knows to be false or which he does not know to be true, at the time he makes it, and the other party acts upon the representation to his loss, this entitles bim to equitable relief. It is against good conscience for a *398party to keep the fruits of a bargain obtained by such means. Florida v. Morrison, 44 Mo. App. 539; Caldwell v. Henry, 76 Mo. 254; Walsh v. Morse, 80 Mo. 568-573; Ring v. Vogel, 44 Mo. App. 111; Bigelow on Fraud, 11; Redgrave v. Hurd, 20 Chy. Div. 1, 12 e. a.; Cooley on Torts, 586; Glasscock v. Minor, 11 Mo. 655; Hamlin v. Abell, 120 Mo. 188. It seems to us that the admissions of the pleadings and the evidence relating to the falsity of the representations taken together clearly negate the idea that the defendants may have made the representation innocently, or on mistaken information, or upon a bona fide belief, founded upon reasonable ground that they were true. We can not doubt that the fraudulent representations were sufficiently established to justify the ftnding.

The defendants in their answer alleged that since the institution of the suit that the defendant Fern aid had paid plaintiff ’the sunn of $500 for and on account of the cause of action set out iu 'his petition and that they were entitled to a credit thereon for that amount. Defendants now claim that this payment had the effect to discharge all of the defendants. There was no plea of release. No such defense was interposed by the answer. The defendants having claimed in the trial court that the payment was but a credit on the cause of action stated in plaintiff’s petition, can not he allowed here to take a position at variance with that 'there taken. This goes with the saying.

The defendants’ able and ingenious counsel have argued with much force and plausibility that the finding of the court was against the weight of the evidence. It must he conceded that there was much conflict of opinion amongst the witnesses who testified as to the value of the land to which the title had failed. The court was in a better position to weigh the conflicting evidence than we are; and we can not say that injustice has been done by the finding of the court either on the claim *399made by the plaintiff or on .the counterclaim set up in the defendants’ answer.

We shall no't reverse the decree on account of the error in the tidal judge in overruling the defendants’ demurrer, since a retrial of the cause with proper parties would probably lead to the same result. The defect can be remedied here by appropriate action. Muldrow v. Railway, 62 Mo. App. 431. Accordingly it is ordered that upon the filing by the plaintiff, within ten days hence, of the joint release of plaintiff and his co-obligee H. A. Culver to defendants of all further actions for the fraud and false representation complained of in this case, the judgment herein will be affirmed; otherwise, it will be reversed.

All concur.
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