69 N.J. Eq. 145 | New York Court of Chancery | 1905
(after statement of issues).
The points to which the arguments were principally directed at the hearing were—first, the representations made as to the condition of the trees and the existence of the scale on them during the treaty for purchase or exchange, and whether the charges of the bill in this respect were proved; second, the truth or falsit3r of the representations made; and third, whether the complainant has not by his action -and conduct since the exchange and since the time of his alleged discovery of the falsity of defendant’s representations deprived himself of the equitable xemed}’’ of rescission of the contract, not only by an election to ratify and stand by the exchange, but by such neglect of proper treatment of the trees and orchards as to make rescission of the contracts now inequitable and unjust.
The extent to which the trees were actually infected by the scale at the time the exchange was made and when complainant took possession under the agreement (October 15th, 190&), was another point to which considerable evidence (expert and other)
Certain principles controlling courts of equity in relation to the rescission of contracts which have been entered into and executed in reliance upon representations of fact which are material and which are subsequently found by the complaining party to be untrue, seem to be entirely settled. In these eases the mere falsity of a material representation entitles the injured party to the equitable remedy of rescission, if applied for with the promptness required by all the circumstances of the case. Proof of the defendant’s knowledge of the falsity of tire representation is not considered as essential to the right of rescission, nor is the honest belief of the defendant in making the representation a bar to this relief, as it may be in a common law action for deceit. At law, fraudulent intent, or, as is sometimes said, moral fraud, must be shown to have existed, while in a court of equity the complainant may succeed although the representation was innocent. Cowley v. Smyth, 46 N. J. Law (17 Vr.) 380, 393 (Supreme Court, 1884); Eibel v. Von Fell, 55 N. J. Eq. (10 Dick.) 670 (1897). In Cowley v. Smyth, supra, it was decided that in an action for deceit for false representations as to the solvency of a bank, of which the defendant was a director, fraudulent intent must be proved, and it should be left to the jury to say whether the defendant made the representations with a fraudulent purpose or whether he made them in good faith and in the honest belief that they were time. This decision has since been considered as establishing
In the early case of Snyder v. Findley, 1 N. J. Law (Coxe) 48, 51 (1791), Chief-Justice Kinsey, at nisi prius, ruled that at law a false representation inducing the contract in that case (taking the note of a third person in payment for goods sold on the representation that the note was good) was fraudulent, whether innocent or not, but this ruling, if inconsistent with the later cases, must be considered as overruled, and as important only for its bearing on the question debated (in Derry v. Peek, infra, and elsewhere) as to the original doctrine of the common law. Newbigging v. Adam, 34 Ch. Div. 582, 594 (Lord Bowen, 1886); Sir F. A. Pollock, in 5 Law Qu. Rev. 410, and cases cited; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. (2d ad.) § 884, cases cited in note; 15 Cent. L. J. 327. The rule settled in Cowley v. Smyth, supra, is that of the leading case, Derry v. Peek, 14 App. Cas. 337 (1889), decided in the house of lords, in which, after great consideration, it was finally settled, in England, that in a common law action for deceit an honest belief of the defendant in the statements made was a defence, and that the fact that the belief was not, in the opinion of a court or jury, founded on reasonable grounds, did not of itself make the representation actionable, although the reasonableness of the grounds of belief might be considered on the question of honesty in entertaining it. The rule that in equity the complainant may rescind, although the representation was innocent, was stated and applied by Vice-Chancellor Stevens, in Eibel v. Von Fell, supra, in a ease where the representation of a vendor (assumed to be innocent) was that the house was as good as new, but in fact contained rotten timbers. The reasons given for extending the equitable. remedy of rescission to cases of innocent misrepresentations, which have induced a sale, has been best stated by Sir George Jessel, in Redgrave v. Hurd, 20 Ch. Div. 1; 51 L. J. Ch. 117 (1881) : “It was put in two ways, either of which was sufficient to induce a court of equity to
In Derry v. Peek, supra, the equitable rule in cases of rescission is recognized as settled, and the question mainly examined in the elaborate opinions of the judges is whether the justices of the court of appeal rightly applied to a claim, which was substantially an action for deceit, the equitable rules in cases of rescission. This equitable right to rescind for false representations innocently made is recognized, also, by other courts, which hold fraudulent intent neeessar3r in actions for deceit. Kountze v. Kennedy, 147 N. Y. 124, 129 (1895).
On the authority of these cases, therefore, I conclude that if the representations as to the condition of the trees and the absence of the scale alleged in the bill are proved to have been made, and to have been the representations which induced the contract, and they are false, the complainants, on the discovery of the untruth of the representations, had then an equitable right to rescind the contract, whether the representations were innocent or fraudulent. If the representations and their falsity are satisfactorily proved, the allegations, as to their willful and fraudulent character, may, so far as any right to rescind is concerned, be considered as superfluous or unnecessary.
Upon the whole evidence, my conclusion as to the representations made by Nugent to DuBois is, that during the treaty for exchange, and both by circulars which came to DuBois’ attention and in the personal interviews, Nugent represented that the trees were sound and healthy and fruitful, but that during the negotiations, and before the contract of exchange was made, Nugent also disclosed to DuBois the existence of scale in one of the large orchards and in the small kitchen orchard, and that! he actually showed DuBois the scale on a few trees in those orchards. And I find, further, that DuBois concluded the exchange actually knowing of the existence of scale upon a few trees, and, supposing that to some extent it infected other trees, and that some treatment of the orchards was necessary for their protection from the scale. So far, therefore, as the right to rescind the contract or to relief under the bill depends upon the charge of a false representation by Nugent that there was no scale in the orchards, the complainant’s claim is not sustained by the proofs. It was, however, insisted by. complainant’s counsel at the hearing that on the disclosures made by Nugent, taking his evidence to be true, the complainant is now entitled to relief upon the ground that Nugent, during the whole negotiation, certainly represented the trees to be sound and healthy trees; that this representation charged in the bill was false by reason of the extent of the scale; that Nugent, by his words and conduct, misrepresented the extent to which the scale existed on the trees and its clanger, and misrepresented, also, the statements made to him by Mr. Whitehead in relation to the extent of the scale and its danger.
But this is not a case where, either on the pleadings or proofs, the charges of misrepresentation in reference to the condition of
Eor these reasons I conclude that relief cannot be granted to the complainant on this bill, if the conclusions I have reached as to the actual disclosures made by Nugent as to the scale are correct, and that the misrepresentations'charged in the bill have not been proved.
This conclusion disposes of the question of the representations made and their falsity, and, if correct, determines the case against the complainant. But the further question of DuBois’ conduct after his discovery of the existence and extent of the scale should be considered briefly, because it has a direct bearing on the right of rescission claimed in the bill, either as showing his election to stand bjr the contract after the discovery of the alleged fraud or as so long delaying the claim to a rescission that it would now be inequitable. The discovery of the extent of the scale was made by DuBois certainly not later than the visit of Professor Smith, November 16th, 1902, and probably somewhat earlier. Although DuBois, after this time, complained frequently in his letters and interviews about the destruction of
If DuBois had in fact satisfactorily made out the claim set up in his letter of November 16th, 1902, and in his bill, that Nugent had told him the scale was not on the place, I am not prepared to say that his acts in subsequently carrying out the exchange would indicate an election, for it will be observed that Nugent never replied to this charge in DuBois’ letters or answered his
The other question whether a rescission of the exchange, first asked by the filing of the bill on January 13th, 1903, is applied for too late, even if there had been no election, is not raised by the answer, but was raised at the hearing and argued. The evidence, considered on all sides, gives rise to some doubt whether, if Nugent had, on filing the bill, consented to the rescission (supposing it to be established on the proofs that the contract should be rescinded, and that equitably, therefore, he should have consented to it on the filing of the bill), his situation in reference to the treatment and care of the orchards would have been sub
It appeared by the evidence that subsequent to the filing of the bill, and in the spring of 1903, DuBois made no effort, by spraying or otherwise, to protect the orchards, and that at the time of the hearing, in 1904, most of the orchards were practically dead, and the farm, as a fruit farm, practically worthless. It is clear, by all of the evidence, that unless attended to in the fall and winter of 1903-1904, at the latest, there was no hope of saving the orchards. Two of Mr. Nugent’s witnesses— expert fruit-growers—who have had large experience with orchards infected by scale, and who examined the orchards in June, 1903, say that the larger portion of the orchards could then have been saved by- treatment in the winter of 1904, but their examination of the orchards was somewhat hasty, and as to the extent of the scale in the spring of 1903 the evidence of Chrysler, who had charge of the orchards under Nugent, and afterwards under DuBois, seems to be more reliable. I-Ie says that in the spring of 1903 there were two or three hundred of the plum and peach trees which were entirely dead, and that about a third of the trees needed to be “headed back” in order to save them; that the other two-thirds could have been saved, he thinks, by