Lead Opinion
Plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendants the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars as damag'es on account of the alleged fraud perpetrated upon him by defendants in that, as he alleges, for a commission agreed by him to be paid to them, they undertook to trade certain property owned by plaintiff for a tract of real estate in Arkansas, and that, in pretending to consummate the deal, the defendants falsely and fraudulently represented to the plaintiff that one Henson was the owner of the land; that the defendants furnished the plaintiff with a pretended abstract of title to the land, showing said Henson to be the owner thereof, but that said Henson did not own
The defendants’ answer is a general denial. A jury trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of forty-five dollars, from which judgment the plaintiff has appealed, assigning as error the action of the trial court in refusing to admit testimony offered by him as to the reasonable market value of the Arkansas land at the time the fraud is alleged to have been perpetrated upon plaintiff by defendants, the court excluding the offer on the ground that the measure of damages was confined to the amount of the money paid. . The court also refused the following instruction requested by the plaintiff.
“If the jury find the issues for the plaintiff, then you should find for the plaintiff the full value of what said land would have been worth at the time of said sale if the title to said land had been as represented by said defendants, not to exceed $2500.”
This refused instruction is set out in the appellant’s abstract of the record and is said to have been taken from page 126 of the bill of exceptions. No other instructions are quoted in appellant’s abstract of the record.
The issue here for review is clearly and concisely •defined by the appellant as follows: “The contention of the plaintiff and appellant herein at the trial court and here is that the rule in this State is that, in cases where fraudulent representations are made as to property which induced a person to part with money or other valuable consideration, the measure of damages is the difference in the reasonable market value of the property at the time of the transfer, if as represented, and its value as it really was.”
The respondents in their brief state that they agree with appellant that “there is but one point to be determined and that is the measure of plaintiff’s damages.” Respondents also state: “This is an action ex delicto, and is in no wise to be confused with actions arising out of breach of contracts, or actions ex contractu.”
From the case of Ryan v. Miller,
We had occasion in the case of Peters v. Lohman,
That the appellant in this case is seeking relief under the first above mentioned remedy is clear from the allegations of his petition, as is conceded by the respondents, and we must, therefore, hold under the authorities in this State that he is entitled to recover the “benefits of his bargain” and that the trial court committed error in refusing to admit the testimony and to give the instruction above quoted.
The respondents, in support of their contention, cite the cases of Tapley v. Labeaume’s Exr.,
Judge Graves in the case of Kendrick v. Ryus,
Since the court erred in excluding the testimony offered and in refusing the instruction requested, we reverse the judgment and remand the case.
Rehearing
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
Respondents in this case are insisting that this court consider and pass on questions not presented to us by the record. They insist that the merchandise represented by the invoices assigned to them, or the party whom they represented on the trade for the land, had no existence or value or that plaintiff had no more or better title to such merchandise than the party for whom respondents purported to act in making the trade had to the land. It is insisted that the transaction was, in part at least, merely a trade of land for merchandise and that while the title to the land failed on the one side, so did the title or value of the merchandise fail on the other side, and that plaintiff ought not to be allowed to recover for
