28 Mo. 99 | Mo. | 1859
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a petition to foreclose a mortgage given to secure the payment of a promissory note. It seems the defence set up was a partial failure of consideration, caused, it is alleged, by the false and fraudulent misrepresentations of the plaintiff. There were three answers filed to the petition. The first answer stated that the only consideration of the note was an undertaking on the part of the plaintiff to convey to the defendant, by a good and sufficient deed, the north half of the north-east quarter of section 18, in township 66, range 20 ; that plaintiff failed to execute the conveyance, and that defendant had never received possession of said land. This
This case is unlike that of House v. Marshall, 18 Mo. 368, in which relief was given on account of misrepresentations as to the quality of the land made by the vendor to the purchaser. There land lying in Missouri was sold to one in Kentucky, who had never lived in Missouri, and who had never seen it. So, in the case of Smith v. Richards, 13 Pet. 26, which is a leading one on this subject, a sale was made of land lying in Virginia to a citizen of New York, who had never seen it. Here, it does not appear that the defendant was ignorant of the state of the laud. His petition shows that he seeks relief on the ground that the improvements did not exist, which were represented to be on the land. The defendant says that he did not examine the land. As that subject was on his mind, why did he not make a clean breast of it, and state whether or not an examination of the land was necessary in order to be apprised of its state ? For aught that appears, he might have lived within sight of it. Sugden says the rule of the civil law was simplex commen-dalio non obligat. If the settler merely made use of those expressions which are usual to settlers who praise at random
Judgment affirmed;