296 N.W. 525 | Minn. | 1941
The plaintiff was the owner of a bungalow in the Riverview Addition to the city of Minneapolis, and the Niles Holding Company was the owner of a fourplex in the University Addition to that city. Plaintiff was a widow with no business training or experience and unfamiliar with real estate values and transactions. Her bungalow was alleged to be reasonably worth $4,000. The defendants White Investment Company and Frank H. Pearce were acting as agents for the sale of the fourplex and induced the plaintiff to purchase it under a contract for deed dated August 1, 1938, calling for a consideration of $13,000.02 and as a down payment on the contract took the plaintiff's bungalow and gave her credit for the sum of $3,416.62, which was the agreed value of the bungalow after deducting the encumbrance against it. The contract called for the payment of $200 per month plus the taxes on the property, commencing the first day of September, 1938. The plaintiff defaulted on the November payment, and the defendant holding company commenced cancellation proceedings on the 1st of February, 1939. The plaintiff was unable to relieve herself of the default, and the cancellation proceedings were concluded March 3, 1939, and the plaintiff evicted from the premises. The plaintiff brought this action to recover the value of her equity in the bungalow, alleged to be worth $3,500, on the theory of unjust enrichment on the ground that the defendants had practiced fraud and deceit upon her in inducing her to enter into the contract of purchase. She alleged in her complaint that the defendants misrepresented the value of the fourplex, that it cost $16,000 to construct and was reasonably worth approximately that amount or at least the sum of $13,000, and that she could obtain a loan of $7,500 thereon in order to carry the property.
The property was rented for $165 per month and the annual taxes thereon amounted to $491.72. The plaintiff had an income from her work of only $80 per month. She further alleges that the defendants were well aware of the limits of her income but maliciously represented to her that she would be able to carry out the contract and make the monthly payments thereon in addition *447 to the taxes. The complaint contains allegations that the misrepresentations were made for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff of her bungalow and to enrich the defendants and with the knowledge that plaintiff was a person of limited experience and totally unfitted to deal with business problems; that she reposed faith and confidence in the defendants, relied upon their representations, and conveyed her equity in the bungalow to them as a down payment; and that thereby the defendants have been unjustly enriched at her expense to the extent of the value of the property, namely, $3,500.
1. The only question involved on this appeal is whether there are sufficient allegations of fraud to make an issue for trial. The case is not like Olson v. N. P. Ry. Co.
2-3. This brings us squarely to the point of the sufficiency of the allegations in this complaint to establish fraud which would have justified rescission. Taking the pleading by its four corners, it in effect charges a plan to defraud the plaintiff of her bungalow by inducing her to purchase the fourplex under a contract which the defendants well knew she must shortly default upon and by the terms of which she would lose the bungalow upon such default, and they would, upon cancellation of the contract to convey, get title to both properties. There were added allegations of fraud with relation to values and of a false representation that she could obtain a mortgage for $7,500 from the Minneapolis Savings *448
Loan Association. While it was a simple matter of arithmetic to determine that she would not be able to pay the $200 a month out of the rents and her other income and have anything left to live upon, and while of course, as said by this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Mitchell, in Perkins v. Trinka,
The rule that representations as to the value of property are dealers' talk not rising to the dignity of an assertion of fact is founded upon the theory that the parties are dealing at arm's-length and that each has an equal opportunity of ascertaining the true value. But where it is reasonably clear that because of the relations of the parties and the peculiar circumstances of the case a false representation as to value and a reliance thereon has produced a palpable fraud, the strict rule yields to the justice of the case and resolves the representation into one of fact. Adan v. *449
Steinbrecher,
The judgment of the lower court is reversed.