38 Wash. 422 | Wash. | 1905
The record discloses that, in the early part of July, 1900, the appellants, who were real estate dealers, in the city of Ballard, approached the respondent John Lawson and proffered to sell to him four certain lots, then owned by the appellant Lee, known and described as lots 26, 27, 28, and 29, in Block 9, in Ballard Park Addition to the city of Ballard. The lots were on the outskirts of the city of Ballard in an unimproved part, of the city, and, together with the surrounding property, were overgrown with trees and brush, and overlaid with logs, so that- the stakes originally put in to mark the lots and blocks could not be- found. During the negotiations between the parties, the appellant Vernon took the respondent John Lawson to the place near where the lots Were located, and pointed out. to the respondent certain lots, which he said were the lots of his co-appellant and the lots they purposed selling, but which, in fact, were lots owned by other persons, and some one hundred and sixty feet west of the lots owned by Lee. On returning, •the respondent Lawson agreed to purchase the lots, and thereupon the appellant T^ee executed a deed to him for the lots above described, assuring him that the lots pointed out to him by Vemon were the lots described in the deed. The deed was executed and delivered sometime in July, 1900, and a few weeks thereafter the respondents entered into possession of the lots pointed out by Vernon, and, between that time and the early part of the year 1903, cleared and fenced the same, dug a well thereon, set out thereon a number of fruit trees, and commenced the erection of a dwelling house.
About the time they commenced building the house,
The appellants requested the court to give the jury the following instructions:
“(1) The claim of. the plaintiffs in this case is that they purchased from the defendants certain real estate described in the complaint, but that the defendants showed certain other property to the plaintiffs and falsely, deceitfully, and fraudulently informed the plaintiffs that such other lots were in fact the lots which plaintiffs were about to buy. Before you can find for the plaintiffs in this action, you must find that in fact such representations were made, that they were false, that they were known by the defendants to be false, or were not made in good faith by the defendants, and that the plaintiffs relied upon the same.
“(2) If you find that representations as to the location of the property were made which were not correct, but that the defendants were acting in good faith in making
“(5) If you find that the location of the lots claimed to have been sold by defendants to the plaintiffs could have been readily ascertained by the plaintiffs, and that any mistake as to their location arose from the failure of the plaintiffs to avail themselves of any means readily accessible to them, then they cannot recover from the defendants in this action.
“(6) The court instructs you that, if the plaintiffs are entitled to recover anything from the defendants in this action, tire measure of damage and the amount of recovery to be determined by your verdict is the difference in value between the lots of land which plaintiffs claimed that the defendants pointed out to the plaintiffs as the land they were buying and the land actually described in the deed given to the plaintiffs. If the land so described in the deed was more valuable than the land pointed out, and if other facts exist entitling the plaintiffs to a verdict, then the amount of your verdict should be the amount in which the value of the land so pointed out exceeds the land actually described in the deed. On the other hand, if the land described in the deed was of the same value as the land so alleged to' have been pointed out to the plaintiffs, or was more valuable than the land so pointed out to the plaintiffs, then the plaintiffs would not be damaged by any mistake or misrepresentation as to the location of said land, and you should render a verdict for the defendants herein.
“(7) If you render a verdict for the plaintiffs herein, you cannot take into consideration, in fixing the amount of such verdict, any work done or improvements made upon the property which plaintiffs claim was pointed out to them by the defendants, as any such work or improvements form too remote or speculative an element to be taken into consideration in a case of this kind.”
The court refused to give the requested instructions,, but gave the following:
“(1) If you believe, from the evidence, that the defendants, or either of them, prior to the sale of the prop
“(2) If you find from the evidence
“(3) The court permitted certain evidence to be introduced as to the nature and value of the property which was actually described in the deed, and upon which plaintiffs were living. That evidence was not admitted for the purpose of proving in this suit any counterclaim or any justification, but merely upon the credibility of witnesses and the likelihood of certain transactions having or not having taken place. If you find that the defendants, or either of them, prior to the sale of the property, told the plaintiffs they would sell him the lots which he subsequently improved, and pointed out said lots to him and that plaintiffs acting upon such representations and relying thereon, improved the said property, they are entitled to recover damages, regardless of the nature or value of the lots described in the deeds, and the value of said lots has nothing to do with the question of the amount of damages which should be awarded.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of the respondents for the sum of $250, and a judgment was entered in their favor, from which this appeal is taken.
The appellant first assigns that the court erred m giving the second of the instructions given, and in refusing to give the first and second of the requested instructions. They argue that this is an action for false representations or deceit, and that a plaintiff, to recover in such an action, must not only show that the representations relied upon were false, but that the defendant knew them to be false at the time he made them; and the charge of the court in this case, he argues further, leaves out the elements of knowledge on the part of the defendants.
It seems to be the rule announced by the majority of the courts that representations, on which another relies to his injury, to be actionable, must be fraudulent as well as false: But the courts announcing this rule have taken somewhat advanced grounds on the question as to what constitutes fraudulent representations. The prevailing doctrine is that, if a person states as true, as of his own knowledge, material facts susceptible of knowledge, to one who relies and acts thereon to his injury, he cannot defeat recovery by showing that he did not know that his representations were false, or that he believed them to be true. The falsity and fraud consists in representing that to be true which he did not know to- be true. Cottrill v. Krum, 18 Am. St. 549, note p. 560; 4 Sutherland, Damages (3d ed.). §1169.
“If the defendants relied upon the representations of the plaintiff, and were led to believe by such representations that lot 2 contained 36% acres, when in fact it only contained 26% acres, and were induced by such representations to purchase said lot as a lot of 36% acres, it makes no difference whether plaintiff knew such representations to be false or not, he is liable. If he knew the lot did not contain 36% acres, and represented to defendants that it did, he would be guilty of fraud and deceit; but if he did not know it, and believed that the representations he made were true, and defendants, acting upon such representations, were damaged because it eventuated that they were not true, the liability of the plaintiff would be the same. In neither case will he be allowed to retain the benefit flowing from his misrepresentation. Mr. Justice Story thus states the rule: ‘Whether a party thus misrepresenting a material fact knew it to be false, or made the assertion without knowing whether it were true or false, is wholly immaterial; for the affirmation of what one does not know or believe to be true is equally, in morals and law, as unjustifiable as the affirmation of what is known h> be positively false.’ ”
In Sears v. Stinson, 3 Wash. 615, 29 Pac. 205, the
These cases sustain the instruction complained of in the Case at bar, for it can make no difference in principle whether the false representation concerns the quantity of land conveyed, or the precise location of the land conveyed. Each is a representation of a material fact, calculated to deceive the grantee and induce him to act when he otherwise would not act, and there would be no reason in holding that the one is actionable when innocently made; while the other is not.
The appellant, however, contends that these cases have been overruled by the later case of Northwestern S. S. Co. v. Dexter Horton & Co., 29 Wash. 565, 70 Pac. 59. That case holds that false representations as to the solvency of a third person are not actionable unless the representations are made with knowledge of their falsity, or are made positively and recklessly without knowledge whether they are true or false. The writer confesses that he had difficulty in reconciling the decision in this case with the decisions in the earlier cases, and for that reason did not concur in the opinion. The majority of the court, however, thought the cases differed so far in principle as to- be distinguishable; the distinction pointed out being that the representations in the earlier cases involved only questions of fact, while the representations in the Tatter, being as to the solvency of a person, necessarily involved opinion, as
It is next assigned that the court erred in instructing as to the measure of damages. The appellant contends that the correct rule is the excess in value of the land pointed out over that actually conveyed, and he argues that especially ought this to be the rule when the representations were made by the defendants without knowledge of their falsity. But the character of the representations, that is whether they are made with'or without knowledge of their falsity, cannot affect the amount of the recovery. In this case as in all others, the recovery should be commensurate with the injury; that is to say, the guilty party is to be charged with such damages as have naturally and proximate-ly resulted from his wrongful act. In eases like the one at bar, these cannot be measured by the excess in value of the lots pointed out over those actually conveyed. This is doubtless one element of damage where the fact assumed exists, but it may be, and usually is, the least of the damages suffered by the person injured. It was to be supposed that the respondents here were buying this property for residence purposes, that they would improve it by clearing it of its brush and timber, that they ■would erect a dwelling house thereon, and that they would plant it with fruit trees, berry bushes, and useful and ornamental shrubbery. To be compelled to abandon these was clearly a damage to- the respondents, and a damage which was the natural and proximate result of the appellants’ act.
Cases where this precise question is presented seem
Lastly, it is assigned that the court erred in refusing to instruct that the respondents could not recover, if they failed to avail themselves of means readily accessible to them, by which they could have avoided entering on the wrong land. This court has held, in common with many other courts, that false representations on the part of a vendor are not actionable, even though relied on by the vendee, if the means of knowledge was as open to the vendee as it was to the vendor. Washington Cent. Imp. Co. v. Newlands, 11 Wash. 212, 39 Pac. 366; Baker v. Bicknell, 14 Wash. 29, 44 Pac. 107; West Seattle Land & Imp. Co. v. Herren, 16 Wash. 665, 48 Pac. 341; Griffith v. Strand, 19 Wash. 686, 54 Pac. 613; Walsh v. Bushell,
But these cases are not in point in the case before us. Here the false representation was as to a material matter entirely without the knowledge of the respondents. As it was shown that the ground had been left to overgrow with brush and trees, and that the stakes of the original survey were destroyed, it was hardly possible for the respondents to locate the lots; hence they must of necessity rely on the representations of some one'. Because they chose to rely on the representations of the appellants, the appellants cannot be heard to assert, as a means of escaping liability for making such representations, that the respondents should have gone to some one less reckless in their statements.
The judgment is affirmed.