151 F. 340 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri | 1907
By the hill of complaint presented in this case the cancellation of certain written instruments and the return of money paid is sought by complainant on the ground of fraudulent misrepresentations, charged to have been made by the defendant to complainant to induce the making of such writings and the payment of the money. The case has been fully presented in oral argument, and stands .submitted for decision on abstract of the testimony and printed briefs filed by solicitors for the respective parties. In most things the testimony is conflicting; but the facts material to a decision of the controversy, as I find them,, from a reading of the testimony contained in the abstracts, briefly stated, are as follows :
The defendant is a farmer owning a farm of about 437 acres near Lawson, Clay county, this state. About the year 1898 he entered the dairy business in a small way, and increased that business until in the month of January, 1905, he had a herd of about 100 Jersey cows, about one half of which he had raised on his farm. The remaining half he had acquired by purchase from others. At this time he had an established business. The products of his dairy were well and favorably known among dealers in Kansas City and other places, and commanded prices above the usual market price of such products on account of their superior quality and excellence. The complainant is a young man 26 years of age, experienced for a man of his age in the dairy business, having attended the agricultural school at the State University of his native state, Illinois, for three years, and also having attended an agricultural school located at Ames, Iowa, for a period of a year. He also had been in charge of a dairy farm near the city of St. Louis for some time prior to the
“This contract, made and entered into this 31st day of' Januai-y, 1905, by and between A. J. Watkins, of Clay county, Missouri, party of the first part, and Clarence B. Dorsey, of Clay county, Missouri, party of the'second-part, witnesseth: That the said party of the first part, for and in consideration of the sum of five thousand five hundred dollars ($5,500), hath this day bargain* cd, sold, transferred and conveyed to the said party of the second part the following- personal property, to wit: One refrigerator, nine cans, three boilers; one cauldron, one seal and wire for seal, all his Reid butter boxes and trays, one pair of platform scal.es, one pair of butter scales, one butter mould and die,one churn and worker, one separator, one tester and glass, one can of butter coloring and tablets, one lot of tost bottles, one sack of salt, ten thousand but* ter wrappers, two racks and' papers, two stoves, one lot of stone tars, all his-knock-down butter boxes, one Deering mower, one mare named ‘Ruby,’ four sets of harness, two sixteen-inch plows, two listers, one -planter and disc, twp two-i’ow cultivators, one harrow,, two three-horse double trees, .one Deering corn, harvester, two wagons, one -set of single harness, two saddles, one lot of tools, all the ice in two icehouses, eighty acres of- fodder shredded, seven hundred.and fifty-bushels of corn, one lot of coal, seven sows, one male hog, twenty-four shoats and pigs, heifer calves, ninety-two heifers and cows, seven*343 steer calves and three bulls, one barrel of sal soda, and one Deere eight-roll shredder. All said property is located on the premises of the said party of the first part in section one, of township fifty-three, of range thirty, and the possession of all said property is this day delivered to the said party of the second part. Of the consideration named as the purchase price of said property, the snm of twenty-live hundred dollars ($2,500) Is this day paid in cash,' and the note of the said party of the second part Is this day taken for the residue, to wit, the snm of three thousand dollars ($3,000), due twelve months from date, and secured by chattel mortgage upon a part of the personal property hereinbefore described.
“[.Signed. in duplicate] A. ,T. Watkins,
"Clarence B. Dorsey.”
On the same day, as a part of the same transaction, defendant leased to plaintiff about 330 acres of his farm for the period of one year, for the purpose of transacting the dairy business, at the annual rental of $1,400, payable as follows: $500 June 1st, $500 September 1st, and $400 November 1st, 1905. The lease also contains an option on complainant’s part to lease the entire farm for an additional period of four years at an annual rental of $3,300. All the papers evidencing the transaction were prepared and executed in the law office of Judge Sandusky, attorney for defendant, at Liberty, Mo. The negotiations between the parties respecting the trade consumed the greater part of the day. During these negotiations the question arose as to the insertion in the lease of a clause giving defendant the right of re-entry under his lease in case of nonpayment of rent reserved for the period of 60 days after the same should become due. To the insertion of this clause in the lease complainant objected, on the ground that something might arise making its prompt payment impossible. The cattle might be diseased, the hogs might die, crops might fail, or he might get sick, and be unable to meet the payments of rent promptly, and cause a sacrifice of his property. In reply to this statement defendant remarked the cattle were all right so far as he knew, but that he did not warrant the stock, or any live stock he sold; that the crops would be fed to the cattle, leaving him no security for his rent. About this time Judge Sandusky, the scrivener engaged in drawing the papers, said “there was no warranty,” and defendant said, “No, sir;” complainant saying nothing more in this respect. The papers, including the contract, a promissory note of $3,000 evidencing the deferred payment, a mortgage on a part of .the personal property to secure payment of the same, the lease, and the promissory notes evidencing the rent to be paid in accordance with the terms of the lease, were executed. Complainant paid to the defendant the $3,500 cash on the purchase price, as specified in the contract, and complainant assumed possession of the business and remained in the home of defendant until some time in the month of May "thereafter.
Lor some time after his purchase of. the business, as appears from the proofs, complainant seems to have been .satisfied with his trade, and so late as the month of May it appears he contemplated a continuance of the business and the carrying out of his contracts. While there is proof found in the record that some of the cows, shortly after complainant assumed control of the business, and especially cow
A controversy arose between the state veterinarian and defendant, growing out of the fact that the state official accused the defendant of having injected tuberculin into the cattle, thus reducing their temperature at the time designated for a test of the cattle made for the purpose of ascertaining whether they, or any of them, had tuberculosis, and for the purpose of releasing from the order of quarantine all cattle found not so diseased. Owing to this disagreement ■the cattle at the time this case was heard remained in quarantine in the. hands of the defendant unproductive, because neither the cattle nor the vproduct from them could be disposed of. The proofs further show, in the year 1901, defendant had sold out of his herd some 25 or 80 cows, and that none of them, so far as could be ascertained, has ever been infected with tuberculosis. During all the years defendant had managed the business he had lost in all only 11 head of cows which had died from any cause; and none of them, in so far as could be ascertained, having died from tuberculosis.
With the proofs in this case there has been submitted certain public documents from the pen of the chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry, a branch of the governmental Department of Agriculture, and others, from which it is learned the disease known as “bovine tuberculosis” is, and for many years has been, prevalent in all parts of the civilized world. D. F. Salmon, chief of the Bureau, says:
“The statistics concerning tuberculosis show that it is a disease prevalent in all civilized countries. In some countries, such as the northern part of Norway and Sweden, on the steppes of eastern Europe and Russia, in Sicily and Iceland, and in Algiers, it is said to be quite-rare. The returns from testing British cattle with tuberculin supplied by the Royal Veterinary College,' as*345 stated in March, 1900, shows that, among 15,392 animals tested, 4,105, or 2(5 per cent., reacted.”
From tests made of herds of cattle in many of the states it is shown from the same authority the disease is probably prevalent to a greater or lesser extent in all herds of cattle, and more especially is this true of highly bred herds; the infected running from 3 °/10 to 26 per cent. Taking such statistics as the guide, it is probably true the herd in question may have been to some extent infected when its purchase was made from defendant by complainant; but the proofs relating to this particular herd do not show the prevalence of such disease prior to complainant’s purchase, and wholly fail to show, if it was so infected, defendant had any notice or knowledge of such disease prior to his trade with complainant.
This suit is brought by the complainant to cancel the instruments of writing executed in consummation of the trade and to recover the cash payment made. In the light of the- facts stated, what are the rights of the contending parties? The contract of sale and purchase, as has been seen, contains no covenant warranting the soundness of the herd. The fact that the question of warranty as to the soundness was mentioned during the negotiations, and that the contract is silent in this respect, is conclusive proof none was intended. As said by Judge Sanborn in’ McKinley v. Williams, 74 Fed. 101, 20 C. C. A. 312:
“Where the parlies have deliberately put. their engagements into writing in such terms as to import a legal obligation, without any uncertainty as to the object or extent ol such engagement, it is conclusively presumed that the whole engagement of the parties and the manner and extent of their undertaking was reduced to writing.” Thompson v. Libby, 34 Minn. 374, 26 N. W. 1: Barnes v. Railway Co., 4 C. C. A. 199, 54 Fed. 87; McMurphy v. Walker, 20 Minn. 382 (Gil. 334); Harmon v. Harmon (C. C.) 51 Fed. 113; Wilson v. Cattle Ranch Co., 73 Fed. 994, 20 C. C. A. 241.
As complainant, a competent judge of such property, with full opportunity and ample time afforded him, inspected the herd before his purchase, although the purchase was made for a particular purpose, no warranty of fitness for such purpose is implied. Mechem on Sales, vol. 2, § 1311 et seq.; Reynolds v. General Electric Co., 141 Fed. 551, 73 C. C. A. 23; Howard v. Emerson, 110 Mass. 320, 14 Am. Rep. 608; Hanson v. Hartse, 70 Minn. 282, 73 N. W. 163, 68 Am. St. Rep. 527; McQuaid v. Ross and another, 85 Wis. 492, 55 N. W. 705, 22 L. R. A. 187, 39 Am. St. Rep. 864; Goad v. Johnson, 6 Heisk. (Tenn.) 340; Scott v. Renick, 1 B. Mon. (Ky.) 63, 35 Am. Dec. 177.
There being here neither an express nor implied warranty upon which complainant may rely, the rule of “caveat emptor” applies. Therefore the defendant is not at fault, unless he knowingly misrepresented the facts for the purpose of inducing the purchase made by complainant, or knowingly represented that to be true which was not true, and which be did not know to be true. In other words, in the absence of fraud on the part of the defendant, the sale made must stand.
While the bill here presented charges all the essential elements of an action at law to recover damages for fraud and deceit, it is entirely clear complainant has failed to discharge the burden resting upon
However, it is urged by solicitors for complainant that, although the proofs may fail to show defendant knowingly made any false representations as to the soundness of the herd purchased for the purpose of inducing the sale, yet, this being a suit for rescission of contract and cancellation of the writings made in consummation thereof, if the proofs show any such material statements were made by the defend1 ant however innocently, and the herd was in fact infected with the disease of tuberculosis to such an extent as to render it unsuitable for the purpose for which it was sold by the defendant and purchased by complainant, then it would be inequitable to refuse the decree prayed; and many cases are cited in support of this contention. While, as has been seen, such' is not the theory on which the»bill presented was drawn,-yet it is thought this fact alone .would not warrant the refusal of the decree as prayed, if the proofs are sufficient, and the-rule contended for is applicable to the circumstances of this case. The rule contended for was applied in Billings v. Aspen Mining & Smelting Co., 51 Fed. 346, 2 C. C. A. 252; Turner v. Ward, 154 U. S. 618, 14 Sup. Ct. 1179, 23 L. Ed. 391; Wheeler v. Smith et al., 9 How. 55, 13. L. Ed. 44; Smith v. Richards, 13 Pet. 36, 10 L. Ed. 42; McFerran v. Taylor, 3 Cranch, 279, 2 L. Ed. 436; Doggett v. Emerson et al., 3 Story, 700, Fed. Cas. No. 3,960; and many other cases.
In Billings v. Aspen.Mining & Smelting Co., supra, it is said:
“It is, under tile circumstances in this case, immaterial whether Devereux knew the falsity of these statements or not. Even though, he then believed them to be true, yet as it now appears beyond doubt that these statements were Without foundation, and that the Wood-heirs held the title to one-third of the property, equity will not permit the grantee in the deed to enjoy the benefits thereof, when it appears that the' grantor was induced 'through a total misapprehension, of her. right .and title, which- misapprehension was caused*347 by the representations of the grantee or his agents, even though such untrue representations were at the time made in good faith. In such case the inequity would exist, not in the making the representations originally, but in claiming the beneiit thereof after discovery that the other party has been misled, to her injury, by relying on the statements made for the purpose of inducing action, on her part, which now appear to have been wholly untrue.”
Conceding, for the purpose of the argument, defendant in this case did make statements as to the herd being free of disease, as contended by complainant, and as positively denied by the defendant, yet it is apparent at a glance that the rule contended for has no application here. The rule stated is inconsistent with and does not apply to those transactions where the doctrine of “caveat emptor” is the guide. The sale here made was of live stock, inspected by the buyer before his purchase. As has been seen, there was no warranty of fitness for the purpose for which the purchase was made, either express or implied. The disease which it is now contended infected the cows at the time was in its nature latent and of which the seller had no actual knowledge. The ability of the buyer to determine the existence of this latent disease by inspection, on account of his peculiar training, was equal to, if not greater than, that of the seller. In other words, complainant knew, in the making of the trade in question, under the circumstances in which it was made, the law of “caveat emptor” compelled him to be his own judge of the fitness of the herd for the purpose of the business for which they were intended; that lie could not rely on the superior judgment of the seller as to the existence or nonexistence of a latent defect, the actual existence of which ivas unknown to both. Therefore I am of the opinion, under the facts and circumstances in proof in this case, the rule contended for by the complainant is not applicable, even though it should be conceded the evidence shows the infection of the herd at the time purchased, which in my opinion it does not, except as it may be drawn from a scientific knowledge of the disease as applied to subsequent events.
Again, it may be said the conduct of the complainant is so lacking in that fairness of dealing with the defendant in regard to the property in question, with respect to the disease with which he claims the herd was infected, the manner in which he sought to have tests made for the purpose of ascertaining if it was so infected, the manner of disposing of property on hand cover’ed by the mortgage of defendant, and in abandoning his trade, that his supposed equities do, not appeal strongly to the conscience of a chancellor.
For all these reasons, I am of the opinion that the complainant’s case as made out from the proofs is without equity,’and- the prayer oí' his bill must be denied. It is so ordered.