112 Ala. 576 | Ala. | 1896
In November, 1894, the complainants by deed conveyed a house and lot situated in the city of Gadsden, the property of E. C. Johnson, to Dollie Rogers, and also executed to her a promissory note for five hundred dollars. The consideration for the house and lot and the promissory note was a deed to one hundred acres of land executed by Dollie Rogers and her husband, Joseph Rogers, to E. C. Johnson ; the transaction being an exchange of the land by the Rogers for the house and lot, Mrs. Johnson agreeing to pay five hundred dollars as the difference in value. The Johnsons refusing to deliver possession of the house and lot, Mrs. Rogers instituted ejectment to recover possession. Thereupon the complainants filed the present bill, the purpose of which is to enjoin the ejectment suit, and to procure a rescission of the contract, and cancellation of the deeds and note. The bill avers fraud and misrepresentation by Joseph Rogers, who acted in the transaction as agent for Dollie Rogers, as to the quality and quantity of the land, and the timber growing upon it.
The principles of law and the degree of proof, which authorize the granting of the relief prayed for in the bill, have been frequently stated by this court. In the case of Thweatt v. McLeod, 56 Ala. 375, it was said:. “A misrepresentation of a material fact, on which another has the right to rely, whether made willfuly or intentionally, or from mistake, inadvertence or ignorance, will operate to avoid a contract founded on it.”
In New Orleans & Ala. Coal & Mining Co. v. Musgrove, 90 Ala. 428, it was said : “No principié is better settled, or more uniformly recognized, than that a court of equity will interfere to rescinda contract of sale of land, into which the purchaser has been induced to enter by the vendor’s false representations of material facts, not patent or open to his inspection, upon which he had a right to rely, and did rely, whereby he was injured, and without the existence of which the contract would not have been made. But the rescission of a contract is not a matter of discretion ; the court must be governed by established rules and precedents. Essential elements of
In Joseph v. Seward, 91 Ala. 597, 599, it was said: “By an unbroken line of decisions in this State, if in negotiating a sale of land, the seller represents or points out an improper boundary of the land, he is selling, and thereby induces the purchaser to close the trade ; and if the representation is untrue and the land conveyed, or agreed to be conveyed, is materially less in quantity or value than that pointed out, this arms the purchaser with the right to rescind the contract. * * * And this defense is equally available to the purchaser, whether the seller knows or does not know the representation he makes is false.”
No question of laches or ratification arises in the present case to avoid the application of the foregoing principles. All the authorities agree that the misrepresentations which will avoid a contract must be of “material,” “substantial” facts, and not relate to mere matters of opinion or future intentions. — Meeks v. Garner, 93 Ala. 17; Birmingham Warehouse & Elevator Co. v. Elyton Land Co., Ib. 549, and authorities cited; Joseph v. Decatur Land, &c., Co. 102 Ala. 346. As to the degree of proof, in the case of Bailey v. Litten, 52 Ala. 282, it was said : “Whoever in a court of eqiuty bases a right to the recission or cancellation of a contract on allegations of [fraud] must distinctly allege and clearly prove the fraud.” In Howle v. North Birmingham Land Co., 95 Ala. 389, it was said: ‘ ‘The right to rescission or cancellation of a contract because of fraudulent misrepresentation, must be established by clear and convincing proof. A court of equity cannot grant such relief upon a probability, nor even upon a mere preponderance of the evidence. The representations themselves, and that they were false and fraudulently made, must be clearly established.”
With these principles in view, the question for this
A great many witnesses were examined as to the relative value of the land, and the consideration paid for it. Unless the misrepresentation is clearly established, we do not see the material bearing of this evidence. It is not the province of a court of equity, to even up the consideration of contracts, and see that equality is meted out in the various transactions of life, or to supply judgment and skill where it is wanting. It will not permit fraud and undue misrepresentation, but where parties rely upon their own judgment, or are not unduly imposed upon by others, it will leave them where they place themselves.
The evidence in this case falls far short of “clearly convincing” the judicial mind, that the complainants were induced to enter into the agreement which they seek to rescind, by the false or fraudulent representations of Joseph Rogers. The complainants may have made a bad bargain, but it is not unconscionable. We incline to the view from the evidence that the dissatisfaction has resulted more from the interference of ‘ ‘busy bodies,” than from actual disadvantage sustained at the time of the trade, or from the misrepresentation of Rogers. Although only six or seven miles from where Mrs. Johnson lives, she has never gone to examine the place, relying wholly upon the statements of others as to its condition and quality.
Our conclusion from the evidence accords with that of the chancellor and the decree of the court must be affirmed.
The counter abstract is defective in not specifying the pages of the transcript referred to, and its cost will not be included in cost of appeal.
Affirmed,