60 P. 3 | Or. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit to foreclose a bond for a deed. It appears that on March 18, 1892, Alexander H. Birrell and wife, in consideration of the defendant’s agreement to pay the sum of $1,400 in annual installments of $200 each, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, executed to him a bond for a deed, wherein they covenanted that, upon the payment of the notes given for said sum, and all taxes and charges accruing against the premises thereinafter described, they would convey to him, by a good and sufficient deed, the northwest i of the southeast i, the northwest £ of the southwest i, and the southwest i of the southwest i of section 2, and the northwest i of section 11, in township 25 south, range 6 west, in Douglas County, Oregon, containing two hundred and eighty acres ; it being stipulated that time was of the essence of the agreement. The defendant, by Birrell’s license, entered into possession of said premises, paid the first installment of the principal, with interest and taxes, but neglected to make the further payments agreed .upon, notwithstanding he retained the possession after the same became due. The plaintiff, having obtained from Birrell, who held the legal title to said land in trust for it, an assignment of the notes and of his interest in the bond, instituted this suit; whereupon the defendant, by his answer to the complaint, sought a rescission of the contract on the ground of the alleged fraudulent misrepresentations by plaintiff’s agent with respect to the boundaries of said premises. The cause, being at issue, was tried, resulting in a decree foreclosing the bond, and defendant appeals.
The evidence shows that defendant negotiated for the purchase of said land with J. H. Ray, Birrell’s agent, who had a topographical map thereof, upon which was repre
Ray was evidently led to believe, from an inspection of the map, that the bottom land in question was situated in the northwest quarter of section 11, and his subsequent agreement to convey to defendant land which, as the testimony shows, is worth $20 per acre, for one-fourth of that sum, is a circumstance tending to show that, relying upon the map, Ray represented to defendant that the tract in question was included in the bond. This statement, though honestly made, was nevertheless untrue, and, if it be assumed that Ray’s agency authorized him to make
The evidence shows that the twenty-acre tract which defendant failed to secure is of the value of $400, while he testified, as a witness in his own behalf, that the equivalent area in the northwest quarter of section 11 is not worth more than $1.25 per acre, and, if his testimony be true in this respect, he must have sustained damage by reason of Ray’s false representations in the sum of $375. For the injury thus sustained equity affords an election of remedies, by permitting the defendant to exercise the option of compelling plaintiff to make good such representations, which is tantamount to a specific performance of the contract, or the defendant may rescind the agreement, thereby causing it to be canceled and set aside. These remedies, however, are not concurrent, and the adoption of one is necessarily the exclusion of the other : Scott v. Walton, 32 Or. 460 (52 Pac. 180). The party to an agreement who has sustained injury by the false representations of another party thereto must, if he seeks a rescission of the contract, act promptly upon the discovery of the fraud, and place the other party in statu quo, by restoring or offexfing to return that which he has received : Knott v. Stephens, 5 Or. 235; Frink v. Thomas, 20 Or. 265 (12 L. R. A. 239, 25 Pac. 717); Clarno v. Grayson, 30 Or. 111 (46 Pac. 426); Crossen v. Murphy, 31 Or. 114 (49 Pac. 858). Any unreasonable delay in this respect is construed as affording evidence of an election by the defrauded party to affirm the agreement, and to rely upon the legal remedy of damages for the injury