55 N.J. Eq. 670 | New York Court of Chancery | 1897
On October 5th, 1892, Auguste Yon Fell and her husband, the defendants, sold and conveyed to Mary and Jacob Eibel, the complainants, a house and lot in Griffith street, Jersey City, for $3,500. Of the consideration, $1,000 was paid in cash at or before the delivery of the deed, $2,000 was represented by a mortgage then on the property, payment of which was assumed by the vendees, and the balance ($500) by a mortgage given by the vendees to the vendors. In March, 1896, the complainants commenced this suit to rescind the sale, the bill alleging that it was represented to complainants at the time they purchased that the house was “ a perfectly new house, in absolutely good condition,” and that they afterwards learned that it was “an old building and had been put in repair and fixed up for the purpose of selling it as a new building.”
It was admitted that the house, as originally built, was one story high, and that Mr. Yon Eell, after he became the owner, raised it and put another story under it. At the trial he denied having represented it as a new house. He said that he fully explained to complainants what he had done, and that he told them merely that it was “ as good as new.”
The evidence showed that after complainants took possession they were obliged on different occasions to make repairs. About a year after the purchase it was found necessary to replace some of the old floor beams and weather boards, which were found to be rotten, with new ones. The carpenter work cost $38, and there was some painting, the cost of which does not definitely appear. With this exception it is not clearly proved that the repairs were necessitated by faulty construction.
The complainants now ask that the transaction be rescinded.
The rule of equity applicable to this subject is well settled. So far as applicable to the facts of this case, it may be stated thus: A court of equity will rescind a transaction entered into upon the faith of a material representation, false in fact, if the person to whom it was made relied upon it and in consequence suffered injury.
There is this distinction between the rule of equity and the rule of law : At law, moral fraud must be shown to have been present in the misrepresentation (Cowley v. Smyth, 17 Vr. 382); in equity the complainant may succeed, although the misrepresentation was innocent (Arhwright v. Newbold, 17 Ch. Div. 320; Redgrave v. Hurd, 20 Ch. Div. 1).
Under these rules if the representation was as the complainants
.There is, however, an objection to the complainants’ recovery which seems to be insuperable. They both admit that, within two months after they purchased, they knew the house was not a new house. They say that they were almost immediately obliged to repair because of the condition in which they found it. They had the rotten timbers replaced about a year after they bought. Notwithstanding this, they continued to pay the interest on both mortgages and to pay the principal of one of them. They continued, moreover, to lease the different floors of the property to tenants, to collect the rents and in all respects to deal with the property as their own. They kept on doing this for nearly three years and a half after they first discovered, as they say, the falsity of the representation, and for nearly two years and a half after they had replaced the rotten timbers. I think that, by this conduct and these acts, they ratified the transaction. Pom. Eq. Jur. § 916. It is said that the payments