28 A.D. 220 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
This action was brought to set aside a contract for the exchange-of certain real estate and a deed executed and delivered in pursuance thereof, upon the ground that they were procured and induced by the false and fraudulent representations made by the defendants.. The plaintiffs by their complaint charged that, in August, 1895, they were the owners and in possession, of certain real estate situate in the city of New York of the value of $25,000, subject to a mortgage then there.on of $12,000; that -the defendants, for the purpose of inducing the plaintiffs to exchange this real estate for certain real estate owned and possessed by them in the State of California, consisting of a ranch of '320 acres and 6 lots in Paralta Park, falsely and fraudulently represented that the ranch was worth the sum of'
The defendants by their answer denied substantially all the material allegations of the complaint except the making of the contract and the execution and delivering of the deeds of conveyance in pursuance thereof.
Upon the trial the testimony offered on the part of the plaintiffs tended to show that on the 18th day of August, 1895, they were the owners, subject'to a mortgage of $12,000, of a certain house and' lot in "the city of blew York, which was of the value of at least $25,000; that they were induced by defendants to enter into a contract to exchange, and thereafter did by deed of conveyance exchange, this.lot for certain lands in California owned by defendants, consisting of a ranch of some 320 acres and certain lots in Paralta Park, so called; that at the time of the exchange the plaintiffs had no knowledge of the California lands or their value, which fact was known to the defendants; that the defendants stated and represented that the value of the ranch, over and above the mortgage thereon, was at least $36,000, and that it would bring $35,000 at auction, but was really worth $50,000; that they received $3,000 rent for it in 1895 ; that this was a low rent, but that it was occupied by a former serv
The testimony of the plaintiffs was contradicted by the defend
After a careful consideration of the record before us, we are unable to see how the trial court could have reached any other or different- conclusion than it did. The evidence offered upon the trial tended to establish a clear,cause of-action for fraud and deceit. The plaintiffs had no knowledge of the value of the California property, and were compelled to and did rely on what the defendants said in respect thereto. Their statements were false, and were made for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiffs.
It is, however, urged by the defendants’ counsel that the statements made by the defendants, as to the value of the property, must be treated as the expression of, opinion, and that even though they were false, and known to be false, they do not furnish a basis for a rescission of the contract; that there must be something more than an expression of opinion as to value to entitle one to a rescission. It is undoubtedly true that a mere statement as to the value of. property in negotiations for a -sale, standing alone, where the subject of the representations is equally ojien to both parties for examination, furnishes no' ground for relief; but here the defendants, not only had superior, -but the only knowledge on the subject, and, therefore, the statements were something more than expressions of opinion, they Were statements of facts, and if such 'statements were false, and made with the intent to defraud, and did defraud, then they vitiated the transaction and subjected the defendants to damages. ( White v. Loudon, 90 Hun, 218.) And in addition to the statements as to the value of the property, there -were other gross misstatements of facts, prominent among which were those as to the rents received. It is also urged that the jilaintiffs did not entirely rely" upon the statements of the defendants, and, therefore, they were mot deceived by and did not sustain any damages in consequence of them. The mere fact that the plaintiffs would not close the transaction without sending the telegrams referred to, does not, of itself, jirbve that they were not influenced by the statements of the defendants. On the contrary, the information derived from these telegrams, taken in con
The appellants’ counsel also insists that the judgment must be reversed because a sufficient tender and offer to return by the plaintiffs was not established upon the trial. The complaint, it will be observed, offered to restore to the defendants the California lands, and the record shows that they actually did tender a deed of the same upon the trial. This was all they were called upon to do, because the question of rent or interest was in the hands of the court to adjust in such a manner as it saw fit and as the equity of the case required. It was not necessary, therefore, that the $137 referred to should have been returned or tendered. The judgment rendered makes the proper restitution. (Allerton v. Allerton, 50 N. Y. 670.) Only $9,000 were- awarded to the plaintiffs to compensate them for the damages which they had sustained, and there is abundant evidence to show that their loss was nearly or quite $12,000.. A judgment for damages was proper. Indeed, it was the only relief that the court could grant. Since it appeared that the defendants, after they acquired title to the plaintiffs’ property, placed thereon three mortgages, aggregating $16,000, which entirely exhausted any equity therein and made it impossible to restore plaintiffs to their original position. And it also appears from the record that, after the trial and before the judgment was signed, the property was actually sold to a third person under foreclosure of the first mortgage.
A further suggestion by appellants’ counsel alone remains to be considered. He insists that “ the statement in the decision of the court below, that the plaintiffs, through no fault of theirs, are unable to return the California property, is wholly unsupported by the evidence,” and in this he is correct. There is no evidence to sustain such finding. But the appellants are not injured by it, and
. After careful consideration of all the facts before us, we think the judgment was right. It is, however,-proper that it should be modified to the extent of requiring the respondents to deposit with the clerk of .the court, to and for the use of the appellants, the deed, which was tendered by the plaintiffs to the defendants -upon the trial of the action; and as thus modified the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and Patterson, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, with costs.