Edwards v. Foley

187 Iowa 5 | Iowa | 1919

Weaver, J.

The plaintiff J. M. Edwards is a farmer, and, at the time of the transaction in question, he owned a farm of 160 acres in Audubon County. The defendants, Michael Foley and W. S. Foley, were father and son, residing in the same county, and were acquaintances of the plaintiffs’. At some time prior to this date, J. M. Edwards had acquired title to a small tract of irrigated land in Utah, which property he exchanged for a half section of land in Saskatchewan. Plaintiff was unacquainted with the property so obtained, and took it without personal inspection or knowledge of its quality; but, at a later date, when visiting a member of his family in Montana, he took ad*7vantage of the occasion to prolong his journey and visit Canada, to look at his land.

Some years prior to this date, W. S. Foley had also become the owner of a section of land in the neighborhood of the tract which plaintiff had acquired, as above stated. Plaintiff appears to have known that Foley owned land in that vicinity, and to have looked at it, in passing, while on his visit to that locality; but it is not shown that he then had any thought of acquiring the property for himself, or that he went upon or examined it, or that he inspected it with a view to its acquirement. The date of this visit to Canada was July, 1916. Some time during the succeeding fall, the matter of the exchange of plaintiff’s Iowa farm for the Foley section in Canada became the subject of talk between the parties, the negotiations on the part of W. S. Foley being principally conducted by his father, Michael F. Foley. A written contract was finally executed, under date of October 27, 1916. By its terms, the plaintiff was to convey to W. S. Foley his quarter section farm already mentioned, together with a house and lot in the town of Audubon, at the aggregate price of $26,500, to be paid, $100 in cash on the signing of the contract, and $1,400 on March 1, 1917, when the remainder, of $25,000, was to be satisfied by conveyance to plaintiff of the Canada land. Defendants paid plaintiff the installment .of $100; but otherwise, the agreement for the exchange remains wholly unperformed.

Within a short time after the contract was made, and before the first of the following March, plaintiff, claiming to have been deceived by the defendants’ representations as to the condition, quality, and value of the land, notified defendants of his election to rescind the contract, and tendered repayment of the $100 installment which he had received. Efforts at a compromise and settlement of the dif*8ferences so arising between the parties having failed, this action was begun.

1- SsstonC;TS¿audsentationsTsuffldence! of evi" I. The fact issues are not unlike those with which courts have so frequently to deal in litigation over sales and exchanges of land, and.especially in those cases where the property, or some of it, is situated at a considerable distance from the place of contract, and the complaining party asserts that he was deceived or misled with reference to its character and value. Rohr v. Shaffer, 178 Iowa 948; Dickinson v. Stevenson, 142 Iowa 567, 570; Riley v. Bell, 120 Iowa 618; Sutton v. Greiner, 177 Iowa 532; Hetland v. Bilstad, 140 Iowa 411, 420; Scott v. Burnight, 131 Iowa 507, 509; Franke v. Kelsheimer, 180 Iowa 251; Hood v. Smith, 79 Iowa 621, 622; Boddy v. Conover, 126 Iowa 31, 40; Shuttlefield v. Neil, 163 Iowa 470, 472. The trial court made no specific findings of fact, but held generally that plaintiffs had made a case entitling them to the relief asked. This conclusion is sustainable if we find de novo that the weight of the evidence fairly tends to show that defendants made untrue statements of fact as to the character and value of the Canada land, for the purpose of inducing the exchange of properties, and that plaintiffs entered into the contract believing and relying thereon. As is usual in cases of this character, there is a conflict of testimony concerning many of the items of complaint made by the plaintiffs; but, taking the record in its entirety, we are satisfied that the decree appealed from effects substantial equity between the litigants.

Without reciting the evidence, we have to say that it .satisfactorily appears that, at the date of the contract, plaintiff’s farm was of the fair value of $25,000, and his house and lot of the value of $1,500. On the other hand, we are equally well satisfied that defendant’s section of land in Canada, which was put into the exchange at $25,-*9000, was fairly worth not to exceed $20 per acre, or $12,800. Now, while we have frequently said that the court will not undertake to make contracts for parties, nor to relieve either party from his agreement, simply because he finds he has made a bad bargain, yet, if the inadequacy of consideration be so marked or so gross as in itself to impress the impartial mind with the conviction that a fraud was perpetrated, or if the degree of inadequacy be not so gross, but is yet so great as to emphasize the effect or significance of other proved inequitable circumstances or badges of fraud, it lends support to the conclusion that an undue advantage was obtained over the plaintiffs. 2 Pomeroy’s Equity (3rd Ed.) Section 927; Rarick v. Womer, 184 Iowa 1016. In our judgment, such is the effect of the evidence. There is no apparent reason why the plaintiffs should enter into this deal if they were not convinced or did not believe that the property they were taking from Foley was of a value substantially equal to the value of the farm they were putting into the exchange. Indeed, it seems very certain that, had they known or understood the true situation, and that they were thereby sacrificing half the value of the farm which constituted the bulk of their earthly possessions, they would have unhesitatingly refused to enter into the contract. If they were self-deceived, and defendants did nothing to contribute to their deception, then, of course, the court would not interfere to save them from the consequences of their folly; but we are led to the conclusion that defendants cannot thus wash their hands of responsibility. The plaintiffs’ evidence tends to show that defendants, in negotiating the trade, exaggerated the value of the land, the acreage of land susceptible to cultivation, the supply of good well water, the amount of land actually under the plow, and the quality and productiveness of the soil, and other desirable features. Some of these alleged representations are denied, and the truth of *10others is asserted by the defendants, but we find ourselves in accord with the trial court in its conclusions as to the truth of plaintiffs’ claims.

2. vendor and fraudulent repcguTitaop°portuUn-'^e propertynow II. Counsel for appellants lay principal stress in argument upon the fact that the plaintiff J. M. Edwards admits that, before the contract was made, he had, on one occasion, visited the neighborhood of the Canada land, and had seen it, as above stated? though he denies having been upon the premises, or that he examined or inspected it. Prom this incident it is sought to invoke for appellants the benefit of the rule that, where the means of knowledge, as to the character and quality of property sold are equally open and available to both parties, and it is alike open to the inspection of both, the buyer will not be permitted to recant his purchase on the plea that he was misled by the seller’s representations. But this case does not fall within that rule. The sale was negotiated at a place far removed from the land. The defendant, W. S. Foley, had owned it for several years, and had lived upon it for at least a year, and was in a position -to know its merits and demerits, intimately. Plaintiff had no acquaintance with it, except such as might be acquired by the casual glance of one who, on a single occasion, passed that way, and glanced across the premises from without. This was before he became a prospective buyer, and there appears to be no reason for saying he was bound to give the land any closer inspection, or that, having failed so to do, he may not rely upon Foley’s representations concerning it. The parties did not stand on equal footing with respect to their knowledge of the land or opportunity to know the truth as to its quality or value.

*113. fraud : effect of and relief against: misrepresentations as to land. *10Much reliance is also manifested in the further fact that, before the trade was made, a third person is said to have told plaintiffs of some of the alleged defects in the *11property; but, even if this be true, we think there is no sound principle of law which will permit defendants to escape the re-suit of their deceit because plaintiffs relied upon their word in preference to that of another. .

4. principal and agent: authority of agent: fraudulent representations: acceptance of benefits. III. Although the Canada land was owned by W. S. Foley, the negotiations for its exchange with plaintiffs were, to a considerable degree, carried on by his father, M. T. Foley; and the point is made that there is no showing of the authority of the latter . . . to represent his son, who is, therefore, not bound by the statements or representations of his father. The record discloses very clearly that M. T. Foley did act in the premises, and that the son not only knew that fact, but was present on some of the occasions when his-father assumed to act and speak for him. There can be no doubt that the elder Foley took an active and efficient part in bringing about the agreement, and the son cannot have the benefit of an agreement so procured without adopting as his own the acts done and representations made by the father in procuring it. There is no merit in appellant’s contention on this score.

The record discloses no sufficient reason for disturbing the decree entered by the trial court, and it is — Affirmed.

Ladd, C. J., Ga.ynor and Stevens, JJ., concur.
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