263 Mass. 76 | Mass. | 1928
This is a suit in equity to rescind a contract whereby the defendant Michael A. Saraf sold and the plaintiffs bought a retail business known as “Brighton Paradise,” including goods, chattels and fixtures. The plaintiffs paid $2,300 in cash and gave a note and mortgage securing the
It is a fundamental principle of law, as it is of morals, public policy and fair dealing, that a party cannot contract against liability for his own fraud. Fraud which enters into the making of the contract cannot be excluded from the reach of the law by any form of phrase inserted in the contract itself. Parties cannot by written words prevent the law from inquiring into and granting relief for fraud in the substance of the contract. Butler v. Prussian, 252 Mass. 265, 268. Many contracts have been refused enforcement whereby a party has striven to shield himself from the results of his fraudulent practices upon the other party. Such contracts, if given validity, would overcome the salutary maxim which pervades the common law, that fraud vitiates every transaction at the election of the injured party. Hashem v. Massachusetts Security Corp. 255 Mass. 29, 31. Bridger v. Goldsmith, 143 N. Y. 424, 428, 429. S. Pearson & Son, Ltd. v. Dublin Corp. [1907] A. C. 351, 354, 360. United States v. Atlantic Dredging Co. 253 U. S. 1, 11. J. A. Fay & Egan Co. v. Independent Lumber Co. 178 Ala. 166, 168. Hofflin v. Moss, 14 C. C. A. 459, 463,464. Strand v. Griffith, 38 C. C. A. 444, 448. Passaic Valley Sewerage Commissioners v. Holbrook, Cabot & Rollins Corp. 6 Fed. Rep. (2d), 721,724. See 10 Am. L. R. 1472, et seq. for collection of cases.
The agreement in the case at bar does not go so far as to stipulate that the plaintiffs shall have no remedy against Michael A. Saraf for any fraud committed by him in procuring the sale. But it is an obvious effort to limit and to restrict the plaintiffs in pursuing such remedy both as to time and as to conditions precedent. Its purpose is to exonerate said Saraf from liability for such fraud during a definite period of time, and after the expiration of that period to confine such liability within narrow bounds and to make it conditional upon the preliminary performance of unusual
The findings of the judge are ample to support the allegations of fraud set forth in the bill. The remedy sought by the plaintiffs was open, namely, to rescind the contract, to return the property received, and to recover the price paid including cancellation of the note and mortgage. They are entitled to full relief. Smith v. Everett, 126 Mass. 304. Lefevre v. Chamberlain, 228 Mass. 294, 297. Ginn v. Almy, 212 Mass. 486, 493.
The case at bar is distinguishable from Colonial Development Corp. v. Bragdon, 219 Mass. 170, Sullivan v. Roche, 257 Mass. 166, 171, and similar decisions where parties, freely and without fraud or imposition, have made a written contract to the effect that all representations touching the subject matter of the contract are therein set forth; in such cases it has been held that the terms of the formal contract
It follows that the attempted limitations in the contract, to the effect that the plaintiffs should not seek relief for the fraud practised upon them until after six months from the date of the contract, and even then should be restricted as to the form of relief, were voidable at the election of the plaintiffs, and that this suit was not prematurely brought. Cases like Bartlett v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 226 Mass. 467, and Isam Mitchell & Co. Inc. v. Rastok, 241 Mass. 505, where suits were found to have been brought prematurely, have no relevancy to the facts here disclosed.
The ruling was right that, in the circumstances disclosed as to the fraud in getting the note from the plaintiffs by the payee, the burden of showing that Demarjian was an innocent purchaser of the note for value was upon him. . G. L. c. 107, § 82. Bill v. Stewart, 156 Mass. 508. Lewiston Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Shackford, 213 Mass. 432. The finding that he was not such a purchaser must be accepted as true.
The result is that the final decree dismissing the bill must be reversed. A new decree is to be entered granting complete relief to the plaintiffs, with costs. The details are to be fixed in the Superior Court.
So ordered.