1 Ind. App. 293 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1891
The complaint in this case contains but one paragraph, and is to recover damages arising out of the sale of certain chattels by the appellee to the appellant.
The complaint was demurred to by the appellee in the following form:
“ Comes the defendant in the above entitled cause of action and demurs to the plaintiff’s complaint, for the following grounds of objection : That the same does not state facts sufficient to constitute a ground of complaint.”
The demurrer was sustained and exception saved. . The appellant, who was the plaintiff below, declining to plead further, it was adjudged by the court that he take nothing by his complaint, and that the appellee recover costs.
Counsel for the appellant, in his brief, suggests that the demurrer as above set out was not such as could test the sufficiency of the complaint.
This criticism upon the demurrer is just. There is no such cause of demurrer to a complaint recognized by the code of civil procedure as that which is here assigned. The causes for which a demurrer may be sustained to a complaint are plainly stated by the law, but this is not one of them.
In the case of Blinks v. State, ex rel., 48 Ind. 172, it was, in effect, held that in a demurrer to a complaint, the words “ ground of complaint” were not the equivalent of “ cause of action or paragraph of complaint.”
In the case of Pine Civil Tp. v. Huber Mfg. Co., 83 Ind. 121, the language of the demurrer was: “ The defendant demurs to the plaintiff’s complaint, for the following grounds of objection, to wit: Because said complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a complaint.” It was held that such a demurrer presented no question for the consideration of the oourt.
In the case of Grubbs v. King, 117 Ind. 243, it was held that a demurrer to a complaint for an injunction, alleging, as a cause of demurrer, “ that the same does not state facts sufficient to constitute a good and sufficient petition,” did not call in question the sufficiency of the complaint. See, also, the following cases : Martin v. Martin, 74 Ind. 207; Peden v. Mail, 118 Ind. 556.
The sustaining of a defective demurrer to an insufficient pleading is a harmless error, and, therefore, can not work a reversal of the judgment. Hildebrand v. McCrum, 101 Ind. 61; Palmer v. Hayes, 112 Ind. 289.
The sustaining of a defective demurrer, however, to a sufficient pleading would not be a harmless error, and hence it becomes necessary for us to determine whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
We can not adopt this view. The appellant, desiring to purchase the chattels, went, as a prudent man should do, to the recorder’s office to ascertain if the property was encumbered. He understood the appellee’s name to be Jefferson Warner; the name was so pronounced by the appellee himself, and the appellant had heard it pronounced in no other way. After the appellant, with the assistance of the recorder^ had found a chattel mortgage executed by the name of Jefferson Werner to one Horatio A. Hess to secure $137.25, and while the mortgage record was open, the appellee entered the room. The appellant then remarked, in the presence and hearing of the appellee, that the mortgage before them could not be the record of any mortgage executed by the appellee, or intended for him, as his name was Warner, and not Werner, and the appellant avers that he believed his statement to be true at the time he made it; that the appellee then and there, knowing that the appellant was laboring under a mistake as to his name, and for the purpose of cheating the appellant, and to induce him. to purchase said chattels as free from encumbrance, remained silent and refused to make known that his name was Werner, and that he was the identical person who executed said mortgage ; that he was deceived by the action of the appellee, and left the recorder’s office in the full belief that said mortgage had been executed by some other person than the appellee, and that the appellee knew he was deceived in that, regard •, that afterwards, on the same day, when in company with the appellee, said mortgage record was referred to, and the defendant stated positively, and in substance, that said recorded mortgage was not the record of any mortgage executed by him, because he had never executed a mortgage on said chattels, and further said that he had no knowledge of any mortgage on said chattels. The appellant says he relied on these acts '
Representations will not be deemed fraudulent in law unless they are made concerning some material existing fact, are false, are such as the party had a right to rely upon, did rely upon, and was deceived and damaged.
Misrepresentations may consist as well in the concealment of what is true as in the assertion of what is false. If a man conceals a fact that is material to the transaction, knowing that the other party acts upon the presumption that no such fact exists, it is as much a fraud as if the existence of such fact were expressly denied, or the reverse of it expressly stated. Kerr Fraud and Mistake, 94.
A man may, by mere silence, without active concealment, produce a false impression upon the mind of another. Silence implies assent where there is a duty to speak. Kerr Fraud and Mistake, 100.
To induce one to forbear investigation, or to prevent effective examination, will excuse a failure to inquire. Where one induces another to abstain from seeking information, mere concealment of facts may become fraudulent. 1 Bigelow Law of Fraud, 532.
A man who by misrepresentation or concealment has misled another, can not be heard to say that he might have known the truth by proper inquiry. Kerr Fraud and Mistake, 70; Dodge v. Pope, 93 Ind. 480; Cross v. Herr, 96 Ind. 96; Matlock v. Todd, 19 Ind. 130.
In the case of Hale v. Philbrick, 42 Iowa, 81, the court
It does not appear from the complaint to what extent the mortgage found of record had been examined by the appellant, when the appellee came into the recorder’s office and heard the appellant say that the mortgage could not have been executed by him, because it was not in his name. If the appellee heard what was said by the appellant it was his duty to speak and declare the truth. It is alleged in the complaint that the appellant’s remark was made in the presence and hearing of the appellee. It was not a case where the appellee had a right to remain silent. His silence implied, under the circumstances, that the mortgage was not executed by him, and was calculated to deceive the appellant. The appellant says it did deceive him.
We do not overlook the rule that usually,when facts are brought to the knowledge of a party which would put him, as a man of ordinary prudence and sagacity, upon inquiry, he is bound to inquire, and if he fails to do so, or to do so properly, whether fraudulently ,or only negligently, he will be chargeable with notice of what he might have learned upon reasonable examination. But if he is stopped short in his inquiries, or fails to make a reasonable examination because of the fault of the party of whom he complains, we do not- think the latter should be heard to say that the truth might have been known by further inquiry. And especially do we believe that this would be a wholesome and just rule to apply to one who so very soon after his silence, when he ought to have spoken, and before the sale takes place,makes a positive declaration, in effect, that a further inquiry would have been unavailing.
The complaint bears marks of hurried preparation, and is not as clear as it might be as to whether it is intended to
The complaint was sufficient, and, therefore, the sustaining of the demurrer can not be regarded as a harmless error.
Judgment reversed, with costs.