57 S.E. 464 | N.C. | 1907
The action was to recover $190, alleged to be due by note of defendant company given to plaintiff, which was unpaid.
Defendant answered, admitting the execution of the note, and setting up a defense by way of counterclaim that the note was given as part of the sale, as to the quantity of timber contracts held by plaintiff, and that said plaintiff made false and fraudulent representations inducing the sale, as to the quantity of timber covered by the contracts, causing damage to defendant in the sum of several thousand dollars, which was set up in bar of plaintiff's recovery. Defendant admitting the execution of the notes, the question as to the counterclaim in the cause was, by consent, referred to E. R. Hampton as referee, who heard the testimony and made his report, finding the facts and making conclusion (760) against the counterclaim.
The cause came on to be heard on the report and exceptions, and the judge sustained certain exceptions, modifying the report in some respects, but affirmed the finding of fact No. 12 by the referee, to the effect that no false representations had been made which had caused defendant to make the contract, and thereupon adjudged that plaintiff receive the amount of the note and interest and costs, and defendant excepted and appealed. After stating the case: The findings of fact by a referee, when there is evidence tending to support them, affirmed by the judge on the hearing, are conclusive upon this Court, and must be made the basis of the judgement.Harris v. Smith, ante, 439. *526
The referee in the case before us reports his finding of fact No. 12 as follows:
"Twelfth. I find as a fact that in some conversations between the plaintiffs and the defendant's agent and manager that John Frey told the defendant's agent that he felt satisfied that there was from 250,000 to 300,000 feet of good timber on the boundary embraced by the Breedlove lands; that the declaration was made to apply to the entire Lick Log Creek boundary; that it was given as a mere guess of opinion, based upon what the plaintiff had seen himself and had been told by John Breedlove, but that it was not intended as a willful or gross misrepresentation of the quantity of timber on the boundary; that the parties were dealing with each other at arm's length, on practically equal terms; that it was easily within the power of the defendant to have had (761) the timber on the boundary estimated or measured; that he had been upon and examined part of the timber and had equally as good opportunity, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, to have examined the whole boundary; that the negotiations for the sale were pending for more than two months before the assignment of the contract; that the parties were upon the identical premises on which the timber was located at the time of closing the contract; that the defendant had one or more opportunities to rescind the contract before it was finally closed, which it refused to do; that the contract showed and the defendant knew that he was getting the timber under the contracts by the 1,000 feet, at a certain fixed price; that the price of $100 paid was for the benefit of the contracts and not for the timber; that there was no guaranty or warranty by the plaintiffs that the boundary contained any particular quantity of timber, and that there was no complaint of any shortage or fraudulent misrepresentations by the plaintiffs in making the sale until the plaintiff brought this action to recover the amount due on the cattle on account of the funds in the defendant's hands by Breedlove and Grooms for that purpose. I therefore find as a fact that the sale of the contracts to the defendant by the plaintiffs was not brought about by false and fraudulent representations that were calculated to deceive and mislead a prudent business man."
There was evidence in the record in support of this action by the referee, and, the same having been affirmed by the judge, the conclusion necessarily follows that defendant's counterclaim has not been sustained.
We are referred by counsel to May v. Loomis,
In the case before us the finding is that the representations were mere matters of opinion, given and received as such, and when the parties were at arm's length, each having equal opportunities of informing himself; and the cause comes rather within the principle so clearly announced by Mr.Justice Brown in Cash Co. v. Townsend,
As heretofore stated, the finding of fact No. 12, which we have no power to disturb, determines the question of the counterclaim against the defendant, and the judgment below is
Affirmed.
Cited: Bailey v. Hopkins,