In this action of tort for deceit the material averments of the declaration are as follows: The plaintiff, who was engaged in selling novelties, toys, and games at retail, occupied as a tenant under a written lease the first floor and basement of certain premises on Bromfield Street, Boston. The annual rental reserved in the lease was $4,500. The lease was dated January 15, 1945, and ran to March 1, 1947. Upon acquiring title to the premises in November, 1946, the defendants represented to the plaintiff “that they had a bona fide offer from one Melvin Levine for the leasing of the said premises to him at the rate of $10,000 per year and that unless the plaintiff met that offer and signed a lease for twelve (12) years at $10,000 per year the defendants would evict the plaintiff at the end of his lease on March 1, 1947. ” Believing these representations and in reliance upon them the plaintiff on December 6, 1946, entered into a written lease with the defendant Hanover-Elm Building Corporation for the term of twelve years from January 1, 1947, at an annual rental of $10,000 payable in monthly in-stalments of $833.33. At the time that this lease was executed the defendants demanded as a condition to its execution that the plaintiff pay the sum of $833.33 beginning with the month of December, 1946. The plaintiff complied with this demand and has thereafter paid this amount monthly. “In truth and in fact the representations made by the defendants to the plaintiff . . . [concerning the offer, purporting to have been made by Melvin Levine] were false and known by the defendants to be false and were made by them with the intent that the plaintiff rely thereon and execute the said lease and make the aforesaid payments. ” These facts were recently discovered by the plaintiff and “if he had known of the true facts he would not have executed the said lease. ” “The rental value of the said premises, ” it is alleged, “was not worth $10,000 per year for twelve (12) years, but was worth only $4,500 per year," all to . . . [the plaintiff’s] great damage. ”
*343 The case comes here on the plaintiff’s appeal from an order sustaining the defendants’ demurrer. The demurrer included several grounds, the first of which and the one on which it was sustained was that the declaration does not state a case.
In
Commonwealth
v.
Quinn,
The rule just quoted finds support in a long line of decisions.
Medbury
v.
Watson,
But the plaintiff earnestly argues that these decisions are not in harmony with the trend of modern authority and ought not to be followed. From an examination of the law in other jurisdictions it would appear that the weight of authority would permit recovery on proof of the facts pleaded here.
Moline Plow Co.
v.
Carson,
Most, if not all, courts hold that there are certain types of statements upon which a purchaser is not justified in placing reliance. Thus a statement that an article is made of the finest material obtainable, that a particular automobile is the most economical car on the market, or that a certain investment is sound and will yield a handsome profit, and similar claims are generally understood to be matters of opinion and if reliance is placed on them and they turn out otherwise the law does not afford a remedy.
1
"The law recognizes the fact that men will naturally overstate the value and qualities of the articles which they have to sell. All men know this, and a buyer has no right to rely upon such statements.”
Kimball
v.
Bangs,
*345 But the statement in the case at bar was not of that class. The defendants represented to the plaintiff that they had received a bona fide offer from Levine to take a lease of the premises at an annual rental of $10,000. This was more than a statement of opinion; it was a representation of an ' existing fact. Why, on principle, should one making such a representation be immune from liability if it was false; provided the other elements required by the law of deceit are present?
The rule now relied on by the defendants came into our law more than one hundred years ago and appears to be based on earlier English cases. This court in later decisions, although following this rule, does not seem to have done so with enthusiasm and has repeatedly stated that the rule would not be extended beyond limits already established. See
Boles
v.
Merrill,
The time has come, we think, to depart from the rule stated in
Commonwealth
v.
Quinn,
in so far as it affords no remedy for representations of the sort here involved. Not only is it opposed to the weight of authority but it is diffi
*346
cult to justify on principles of ethics and justice. Moreover, several exceptions have been engrafted upon the rule whereby liability is imposed in situations that- do not differ materially from those falling within it.' One of these exceptions is that if the vendor in selling real estate falsely states the amount of rent he is receiving the representation is actionable.
Brown
v.
Castles,
Stare decisis is a salutary principle, because in most matters a settled rule on which reliance can be placed is of more
*347
importance than the precise form of the rule. But if stare decisis must always be paramount the law would be deprived of its capacity for growth and adaptation, attributes which have been considered to be "the peculiar boast and excellence of the common law.”
Hurtado
v.
California,
It follows, therefore, that the demurrer ought not to have been sustained on the first ground.
Of the remaining grounds
1
set forth in the demurrer only one, the fourth, need be discussed, and this may be disposed of briefly.. In an action pf tort for deceit the plaintiff must prove as part of íns case that he sustained damage, and this must be something more than nominal damages.
Connelly
v.
Bartlett,
*348 The order sustaining the demurrer is reversed, and an order is to be entered overruling the demurrer.
So ordered.
Notes
Many cases illustrating this principle are collected in footnote 166 in Harper and McNeely, A Synthesis of the Law of Misrepresentation, 22 Minn. L. Rev. 939, at pages 1004-1005.
These are: “2. That the declaration is defective in that it fails to disclose whether or not the plaintiff is still occupying the premises. 3. That the declaration is defective in that it fails to disclose whether or not the plaintiff ratified and confirmed the lease in ¡question by electing to remain on the premises thereunder after knowledge of the alleged fraud. 4. That the declaration is defective in that it fails to set forth in what manner the plaintiff has sustained any damage. 5. That the declaration is defective in that it fails to disclose the time when the plaintiff discovered the alleged fraud, the number of months which have elapsed since the alleged fraud, and the number of months the plaintiff has elected to remain on the premises since the alleged fraud.”
