93 S.W. 107 | Tex. | 1906
This is a certified question from the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District. The statement and question are as follows:
"In the above styled and numbered cause pending on motion for rehearing, in this the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth District of *46 Texas a question of law arises, which this court deems advisable to submit to your honorable court for adjudication, and this court has accordingly directed to be certified to your honorable court for decision the following question:
"The action was brought by Hesse for damages for deceit in this: That George represented to him and caused him to believe, and act in consummating the trade, upon the fact that the Dimmit County land had a gusher of water upon it, which representation was material and proved to be false The evidence sustained these allegations. There was evidence that this land without a gusher was worth $5.33 an acre and with a gusher would have been worth $20 an acre. The court charged the jury as follows: "If you find for the plaintiff, then your verdict should be for the difference in value, if any, that you find from the evidence to be, between the reasonable market value of the Dimmit County land on November 25, 1903, without a gusher of water, that is, a strong, flowing well of water on same, and the reasonable market value of said land on said date, with a gusher of water, that is, a strong flowing well of water on same, of the kind that you find from the evidence was represented by George if you find he made such representation." And the jury found a verdict in accordance with such measure of damages.
"In view of cases cited in the motion for rehearing on the question we deem it appropriate to refer the court to certain authorities which are against the rule applied by the charge. Merrill v. Taylor,
"In Farmer v. Randall, 28 S.W. Rep., 384, decided since the case of Merrill v. Taylor, supra, the Court of Civil Appeals at Fort Worth held the rule to be in accordance with the charge given by the trial court, with which we are unable to agree."
We are of the opinion that the question should be answered in the negative. There is a conflict of authority upon the point; but it seems to us that the difference of opinion grows out of a confusion as to the nature of the cause of the action. This is not a case in which the plaintiff sues for the breach of a contract — for the contract has been *47 performed by both parties. But it is a case in which the plaintiff sues to recover damages for a fraudulent representation by which he has been induced to enter into a contract to his loss. Clearly we think the extent of his loss is the difference between the value of that which he has parted with and the value of that which he has received under the agreement. The contract in this case was not to convey a tract of land with a "gusher" on it; but was to convey a certain tract of land, which was falsely represented to have a "gusher" on it, which false representation was an inducement which led to the contract. Logically, therefore, what he has lost by the transaction is the measure of his damages. Let us suppose that when the fraud was discovered George had not conveyed any of the property transferred to him, and Hesse had sued for a rescission as he would have had the right to do; the parties would simply have been placed in statu quo, and the plaintiff would have recovered nothing for his failure to get the property as represented. He would have recovered his property and there would have been no loss, except the expense of the litigation. So in this case, if the plaintiff recovers a sufficient sum in money to make that which he has received equal to that which he has conveyed and that which he has assumed to pay, he is compensated for his loss, and, as we think, that is the measure of his damages.
The question came before the Court of Appeal of England in the case of Peek v. Derry (37 Chan. Div., 541). There the plaintiff claimed to have been induced by a fraudulent representation of the defendants (who were directors in an incorporated company) to pay £4,000 for shares in the company, by which he suffered a loss. It was held unanimously, after special argument upon the particular point, that the measure of damages was the difference between £4,000 and the actual value of the shares. The case was taken to the House of Lords, where it was reversed upon the ground that no fraud was shown, and the question of the measure of damages was left untouched. (14 App., Cas., 337). In Smith v. Bolles (
So in Sigafus v. Porter (