130 Va. 721 | Va. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
The ground upon which Dingus sought to have the deeds cancelled was that Cyphers, acting for himself and for one H. C. Cornett, procured from him the deed for the thirteen acres by false representation, and in pursuance of a fraudulent scheme between Cyphers and Cornett, whereby the subsequent exchange was to be made.
There are no new or novel questions involved, and the decision of the case depends wholly upon the sufficiency of the evidence to support the charge of fraud on the part of Cyphers in procuring the deed from Dingus.
The evidence is voluminous and in many respects conflicting. We shall first state briefly what, as we think, may fairly be called the undisputed facts material to the controversy :
Dingus, Cyphers and Cornett all .resided at or near the town of Coeburn. Dingus and Cyphers were acquaintances and neighbors of long standing. Dingus was a laboring man not much experienced in trading, but was intelligent and thrifty, and in addition to the property here involved owned a tract of about twenty-nine acres worth perhaps several thousand dollars.
Cyphers was a dealer in real estate, on his own account and as agent for others, owned a good many properties, and was an experienced trader.
Cornett had deposited one of these notes with the Miners Bank of Commerce at Coeburn as collateral security for a loan of $500 from that bank, but he was pressed for money, and for some time prior to April 5, 1916, had been making continued and strenuous efforts to exchange one or both notes for real estate. He had a number of opportunities to exchange the notes for land at prices acceptable to him. but all of the owners of such lands refused to take the notes as cash and insisted on retaining a lien to secure the amount in case the notes were not paid. Cornett would not trade that way, giving as his reason that he needed money, and would want to procure a loan on the property, which he could not do if a vendor’s lien thereon was retained.
Mr. C. O. Ramsey, cashier of the Miners Bank of Coeburn, had in former years known Mr. F. A. Shuyler in North Carolina, and regarded him from the reputation he bore there as an honest and upright man, but Ramsey did not know how he was rated in point of financial worth. About the time the Miners Bank made the $500 loan to Cornett, Ramsey had some correspondence with the Shuylers and with a bank at Cornelia, Ga., in regard to the notes held by Cornett, and as a result had been informed by the Shuylers that the notes were genuine and good, and would be paid at maturity; and had also been informed by the bank that the Shuylers had been fairly good customers and were regarded as honest and reasonably safe.
Some little time before the trade was made with Dingus, Cyphers and Cornett had looked at the twenty-nine acre tract owned by the former, and Cornett seemed to be favorably impressed with it. It seems that they had also at the same time seen the two tracts which we have referred to as the thirteen acres. Shortly thereafter Cornett came to the N. & W. pumphouse where Dingus worked every day, introduced himself to Dingus, talked to him in a general way about how land was selling in the community, and told him that Cyphers wanted to see him. Still later, but in a very short time, Cyphers went to see Dingus and tried to purchase the twenty-nine acre tract from him, and in the course of the negotiations told him that he thought he could sell that tract to Cornett. Cyphers says he was trying to buy this land on his own account and turn it over to Cornett at a profit, but the mere fact that they were nego
A day or two later Cornett saw Dingus at Kilgore’s store and asked for a price on the thirteen acres. Dingus named $2,000 as the price, and Cornett said Cyphers would see him about it.
While there is a direct conflict of testimony as to the circumstances under which Cyphers and Dingus next met, the parties agree that a day or two later they did meet at the pump house, discussed the exchange of the thirteen acres for one of Cornett’s $2,000 notes, and on the same day Dingus conveyed these tracts to Moore, trustee, for Cor-nett, in consideration of the $2,000 note, and that Dingus paid Cornett $100, which went to him as his compensation for helping to make the deal. It is also admitted that Cyphers prepared all three of the deeds involved in this litigation, that at the time Dingus acknowledged and delivered his deed to Moore, trustee, Cyphers had the two other deeds in his pocket, and that they were all three executed and delivered the same day, although it seems clear that Dingus did not at the time know anything about the exchange. The Buchanan property, which Moore, trustee, got by virtue of the exchange, was one of the propertieá which Cyphers had offered to Cornett, and about which they had been negotiating just prior to the time of the Dingus trade.
Some time in the afternoon of the day on which Dingus delivered the deed to Moore, trustee, he took the note to Coeburn to place it in the First National Bank, where he kept an account, and was there given information which made him uneasy about its value. He asked Cyphers to endorse it, and upon his refusal brought this suit.
It is difficult for us to reach an entirely satisfactory conclusion in this case. Cyphers denies having made any representations to Dingus about the notes, and claims that he abandoned all his own negotiations with Cornett at the earnest solicitation of Dingus, who, as he claims, was acting independently, had started negotiations with Cornett, and employed him to help complete the trade. He has given an intelligent and clear deposition, which standing alone makes a complete defense to all the charges against him.
On the other hand, Dingus has testified without qualification to the effect that he had offered Cornett the land for $2,000, and after Cornett had said that he would see Cyphers about it, the latter came up to his place of work, said he had come to close the trade, and represented the note to be good, saying (in response to a statement by Dingus that he did not know anything about the Cornett notes) : “They are absolutely gilt edge and good and will be paid at maturity; I have investigated the note thoroughly myself and know what I am talking about.” Further on in his deposition Dingus says again: “I traded for the note from Cyphers; took his word and honor. He recommended the note to be gilt edge and good and worth one hundred cents to the dollar.”
Upon many of the details and circumstances bearing upon the execution and delivery of the deed Dingus and Cyphers and their respective witnesses squarely contradict each other. It is not easy to say where the preponderance of evidence lies. Both Dingus and Cyphers are contradicted by other
The transaction in itself is unusual, and the circumstances by which it is surrounded or set about render it suspicious in itself. Cyphers evidently thought the notes were probably good, but he knew that they were risky. He was a real estate trader; he knew Cornett better than Dingus knew him, and he knew that Cornett was anxious to trade the notes for real estate without the retention of a lien. Dor weeks Cornett had been diligently trying to buy land from or through him on just the terms he got from Dingus, and had failed. The record leaves no room to doubt, and Cyphers must have known, that Cornett was willing to let the notes go for less than their face value, if he could get in exchange therefor a deed for real estate without a lien retained to secure the payment of the note. Indeed, while there is no shocking difference in the value of the two properties actually involved here, the Dingus land acquired by Cornétt was worth appreciably more than the Buchanan property and the Oates Cyphers lots which Cornett got in exchange. Cyphers had been in close and intimate touch and communication with Cornett up to the very morning of the Dingus trade, and there is little doubt that he knew he could exchange for the note the very property which Cornett that day accepted in exchange for the Dingus land. The face value of the note was more than the value of the property which he gave up in this exchange, and it seems a little strange, if he was really willing, as he says he was, to risk the note, that he did not sell direct to Cornett the property which the latter actually acquired in the exchange. Of course, Cyphers in fact made a still better trade, for the Dingus property was worth more than his, but the point is that Cyphers was an active real estate
According to some of the witnesses, Cyphers had theretofore expressed himself as being afraid of the note, and had referred to Cornett on one occasion as a scoundrel, and on another as a slick duck. The witness, R. L. King, who happened to be present when Dingus delivered the deed, says that immediately after the delivery Cyphers said to Dingus: “These notes are absolutely gilt edge. I would not be afraid to risk one hundred cents to the dollar on them.” Dingus corroborates King by saying that Cyphers told him the notes were good, both before and at the time the deed was delivered. Cyphers denies all this, as well as practically everything else that was said by any witness tending to sustain the theory of fraud and misrepresentation on his part, but in making these denials he has at least in one particular gone further than reasonable credulity can follow. He unqualifiedly and emphatically states that he never discussed the solvency of the Cornett note at all with Dingus until some hours after the trade was made, when Dingus had become dissatisfied and asked him to endorse the note; that the only time the notes were even mentioned between them was when Dingus asked him to help make the trade, and said he expected to get from Cornett a $2,000 note. It
Affirmed.