262 Mass. 573 | Mass. | 1928
The plaintiffs, who are husband and wife, bought of the defendant a parcel of land situated in the town of Middleton. The deed among other recitals described the premises as lot 42 on a plan made in 1906, showing many lots, which had been recorded in the registry of deeds. The plaintiffs allege they were induced to purchase the property by the false representations of the defendant, her servants and agents, that the roads bounding the land and shown on the plan had been taken over by the town, and were then owned by the town, and also stated as a fact that work had been recently done on the roads, and displayed a plan of the land showing the roads with their names, and also stated, that “the place was well settled, . . . there was a town system of electric lights, [and] that water had been put in by the town.” Wiley v. Simons, 259 Mass. 159, 161. The plaintiffs ask that rescission may be decreed, or in the alternative that their damages may be ascertained and assessed.
The plaintiffs’ exceptions to the report of the master to whom the case was referred not having been argued, the question is, whether on the pleadings and report, with such inferences as the judge could draw therefrom, the decree dismissing the bill was erroneous.
The master reports that the defendant showed the plaintiff William M. Heftye, hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff, a copy of the plan, and that he had visited the tract, over which he walked, before he saw the plan. By consent of the parties the master also took a view of the tract accompanied by counsel. It is stated that no material changes had occurred between the time of the view and when the plaintiff looked the land over, except that the plaintiff contended that the roads at the time of the hearing were in poorer condition than when he first saw them. The plaintiff, after the plan was shown to him at the defendant’s house,
The credibility of the witnesses was for the master, and his findings on all the evidence "That the plaintiff’s allegation that the defendant made false representations ‘knowing that they were false and with the intention to induce the plaintiffs not to make inquiries from the proper authorities as to the truth or falsity of said representations’ is not sustained,” should not be reversed. Forino Co. Inc. v. Karnheim, 240 Mass. 574. The decree therefore must be affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.