145 S.W. 274 | Tex. App. | 1912
Defendant in error sued G. B. Ketchum for the sum of $390, alleged to be due as a balance on the purchase money for a certain race horse sold by defendant in error to said Ketchum, and joined plaintiff in error in the suit. Neither of the parties appeared, and judgment by default was taken against both for the amount of the debt. The judgment was rendered on May 16, 1911, and on June 21, 1911, an application was filed by plaintiff in error for a writ of error to this court, and the proper bond was given.
The petition, on which the judgment by default is based, alleged that the horse was sold by Bourland to Ketchum for $300, on which sum he paid $110, and that part of the petition alleging the liability of Gibbens is as follows: "Plaintiff says: That the defendants, Ketchum and Gibbens, inspected, examined, and tested the said horse, and after so doing agreed that he was satisfactory, and in all things accepted him for the stipulated price of $500. That said sale was partly for cash and partly on a credit, and the plaintiff at said time was a stranger and unacquainted with the defendant Ketchum, and refused to consummate the sale on said terms; but the defendant Gibbens, who was well known to plaintiff, urged the plaintiff to make the sale to the said Ketchum, representing to plaintiff at the time that it wag a good sale, and that Ketchum was a thoroughly reliable and trustworthy man, and would pay his debts promptly, and in all *275 things live up to his contract. That believing and relying upon the representations of the said Gibbens so made to him, and believing that the said Ketchum would pay him as per their contract, the plaintiff here now alleges that the representations of the said Gibbens were untrue, and plaintiff was deceived thereby, and was induced to part with his horse, with a balance of $390 due on the purchase price thereof, and but for the said representations and assurances of the said Gibbens he would not have so parted with his horse; and plaintiff alleges that because of the said representations of said Gibbons he has been and is damaged in the sum of $390, with 6 per cent. interest thereon since April 22, 1910, and that said Gibbens is liable to plaintiff therefor equally with the defendant Ketchum." Those were all of the allegations contained in the petition in reference to the liability of plaintiff in error, and the only issue is: Do they form a sufficient basis for a judgment by default?
This being a writ of error, sued out in order to obtain a review of the judgment, is not a collateral, but a direct, attack on the judgment. Crawford v. McDonald,
Applying the foregoing rule to the petition in this case, the allegation that Gibbens knew his representations were untrue carried with it the intendment that it was untrue; that Gibbens knew that in fact and in truth Ketchum was not reliable and would not pay his debts or live up to his contracts. Such allegations, coupled with the others made in the petition, would, we think, make Gibbens liable for the debt that Ketchum would not pay. The only Texas case cited by defendant in error is one in which the false representations were made by an agent, and the court held the principal bound by the representations, and there are some authorities cited and approved in that case (Cleghon v. Barstow Irrigation Co.,
If a person states as of his own knowledge material facts, by which another is induced to act to his hurt, it is no defense to reply that, although the representations were false, the person making them believed *276
them to be true. Totten v. Burhans,
Where a person recommends another as worthy of credit, either voluntarily or in answer to inquiry, if the recommendations are false, and known to be so, they amount to a fraud, and if another is injured thereby he may recover. Sutherland on Damages, § 1166.
When a party recklessly makes misrepresentations as to material facts, having no knowledge and no belief on the subject, he will be bound, if the misrepresentations are made with intent to deceive. The rule is thus stated in Cahill v. Applegarth,
An unqualified affirmation of a fact amounts to an affirmation as of one's own knowledge, and if the fact does not exist, and the party affirming it states of his knowledge that it does, the law imputes to him a fraudulent purpose. Hamlin v. Abell,
In the petition on which the default was taken it was stated that plaintiff in error was acting with Ketchum in inspecting, examining, and testing the horse, and that they agreed he was satisfactory and accepted him. To that extent Gibbens was acting with Ketchum. He was busying himself in and about the transaction. The plain intendment is that he was interested in it, and, being interested, he urged the sale of the horse to Ketchum, stating as a positive fact, and not as a matter of belief or opinion, "that Ketchum was a thoroughly reliable and trustworthy man, and would pay his debts promptly, and in all things live up to his contract." The representations were false, and plaintiff in error must have known they were false, and made them to induce a sale, in which he had interested himself. If he did not know the character of Ketchum, then they were recklessly made, with the intent to influence the action of defendant in error, and they did influence such action, and he must be held liable for the consequences. The petition, those reasonable intendments being read into it which the law permits and authorizes, is good as against a general demurrer, and formed a sufficient support for the judgment by default.
If, as we must presume, the evidence showed, in support of the judgment by default, there was a fraudulent combination between Gibbens and Ketchum to defraud defendant in error, it was consummated when the horse was delivered, and the conversion of the horse made possible, and the court properly allowed interest on the amount due on the horse from the time he was delivered to Ketchum. It was properly awarded by the court as a punishment for the unlawful conduct of plaintiff in error. It was not an incident of the debt, but was allowed by way of punishment for the fraud, delinquency, or injustice done by the debtor to the creditor. Heidenheimer v. Ellis,
The judgment is affirmed.