131 Va. 186 | Va. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
On January 1, 1916, John C. Logwood, Jr., through the agency of the Virginia Land Immigration Bureau, sold and conveyed to W. B. Holland an orchard property in Bedford county containing about twenty-five acres. The consideration for this sale and conveyance was $3,000.00 paid and to be paid as follows: $500.00 cash, $500.00 September 15, 1916, $1,000.00 January 1, 1917, and $1,000.00 January 1, 1918, the deferred payments being represented by Holland’s negotiable notes and secured by deed of trust on the property. All of these notes were subsequently paid.
In August, 1917, Holland filed his bill in equity against Logwood and the Virginia Land Immigration Bureau, in which he alleged that he had been misled as to the number
The defendants demurred to and answered the bill, proof was taken on both sides, and the court on April 8, 1918, entered a decree which (1) overruled the demurrer, (2) refused a rescission of the contract and (3) held that the complainant was entitled to an abatement of the purchase price in an amount equal to the value of the trees which were represented to be, but turned out not to be upon the land, and directed one of the commissioners of the court to ascertain and report such value, the report to be based on the evidence already adduced in the cause, as well as any other evidence offered by the parties which the commissioner might deem necessary and pertinent.
The commissioner, after taking further proof, reported that the value of the short or missing trees was one thousand dollars. The Virginia Land Immigration Bureau excepted to the report on several grounds, the one chiefly relied upon being that the commissioner had proceeded on the wrong theory as to the measure of damages; and the court on May 10,1919, entered a decree reducing the sum fixed by the commissioner to $925.00 and awarding the complainant a recovery against both defendants for that amount, with interest from the date of the conveyance.
This appeal calls in question the correctness of the two decrees above recited, and the first assignment of error brings under review the action of the court in overruling the demurrers.
The allegations of the bill, which of course must be regarded as true upon the demurrers, make out a case which in narrative form may be stated as follows:
“Peaks of Otter Orchards”
$10,000 25 Acres No. 1047
Bedford Co., Va. 7 mi. Ry. Terms satisfactory.
“Located on Peaks of Otter road, near Peaksville, R. F. D. route, one mile of church, store and near mill; black Porter’s loan soil with black subsoil, watered by branch and spring hardwood timber land, considerable oak and chestnut; land lies gently rolling with a slope to the southeast, sixteen acres cleared and in orchard, balance in second growth timber.
“Orchard consists of sixteen acres, one of the finest old orchards in the State with 500 bearing trees, thirty-five years old, nearly all Albemarle Pippins, probably 100 Cannon Pearmains; in addition, there are 200 Albemarle Pippins two years old; plenty of pears, cherries, plums, grapes, all bearing and of the best variety.
“Improvements consist of a double dwelling of five rooms and apple house with cellar, barn and implement house. Improvements are not in the best condition. Fences sufficient for the place and satisfactory for the turning of sheep.
“The most magnificent mountain stream passes through the property. This property is one of the most desirable in the State and the most productive. • It has produced $3,000 worth of apples in one year. It is located right near the Peaks of Otter and between two peaks. The scenery is splendid, and there can be no more attractive or desirable orchard location, and the orchard itself has been pruned, sprayed and kept in good order, always having been scientifically handled. The prospects are sufficient to believe that 1912 stock will give returns to pay half the price of the place.”
On November 17, 1915, Holland visited the office of the Virginia Land Immigration Bureau in Roanoke, Va., discussed the property with that concern, was informed that it might be bought for as little a,s $3,000.00, and then came to Bedford county with one Mr. Kinsey, a representative of the bureau, to visit the orchard. There he met Logwood, the owner, with whom he discussed the property, but who made no direct or important statements or representations to him. Holland remained at the orchard on that occasion for about half an hour looking over it in a somewhat casual manner, but made no attempt to count the trees.
After making this inspection Holland returned to his home in New York, and on December 11, 1915, by appointment and in company with Dr. W. J. Quick, general manager, and George D. Wingfield, local agent of the bureau, he made a second visit to the property. At that time Dr. Quick stated to Holland that he was a practical, scientific orchardist; that the orchard was a very fine one; that in one year $3,000.00 worth of apples were sold from it; that he counted the trees with one Mr. Cummins, who had bought the orchard about three years prior thereto, and that there were then about 495 old bearing trees; that possibly a few had died or been blown down since that time, and that he believed that it would be safe to say that there were at the time they were talking not over 490 or 495 trees, but that 200 young trees had been planted. On the next day Holland visited the orchard again, but the weather was
Holland did not visit the orchard after his purchase until June, 1916, and did not make a very full inspection at that time because of weather conditions; but he had placed a man named Clark on the property to care for it, and was informed by him some time in July, 1916, that there were only 320 bearing trees on the place. It does not appear that he made any complaint about this fact until September, 1916, when he saw Dr. Quick and “mentioned this shortage to him and asked if he did not think that he (Holland) should have a rebate, to which Quick replied: ‘You certainly should have if the count is short as you say, but I cannot believe that they can be that short’.”
During the next two or three months Holland mentioned to Dr. Quick on several occasions the shortage in the trees in an effort to get some settlement on that account, and Dr. Quick led him to believe “that something could be done in the matter, but that it would have to be passed on by the board of directors of the Virginia Land Immigration Bureau,” and Holland was “put off in that way from time to time;” and “this proposition for a settlement or rebate on account of this shortage continued on through the fall of 1916, until January 2, 1917.” In the meantime the purchase money note for $500.00 due in September, 1916, was paid by Holland “under the impression and belief that the shortage in trees would be made good to him.”
On January 2, 1917, Holland and the said George D. Wingfield, at the former’s request for an accurate count of
It is further alleged that when the purchase money note due January 1, 1917, became due, and in order to avoid a sale of the property under the deed of trust, it became necessary to pay not only that note but all of the remaining purchase money, whether at that time due or not.
The bill further alleges that by reason of the false advertisement, representations and inducements on the part of the Virginia Land Immigration Bureau, Holland was grossly and fraudulently deceived concerning the property and the number of trees thereon, and thus persuaded to give much more for the property than he would otherwise have given and much more than its true value, and was thereby defrauded and cheated out of $1,050.00.
The prayer of the bill, after naming the Virginia Land Immigration Bureau and John C. Logwood, Jr., as defendants, and calling upon them to answer, but waiving answer under oath, was as follows:
“May the said contract of sale as above set forth as having been induced by false and fraudulent representations be set aside, declared null and void, and your complainant be refunded the sum of $1,000.00 expended by him in and about said purchase, and your complainant’s purchase money of $3,000.00 be returned to him; or if said sale is confirmed, may the defendants be required to pay to your complainant the sum of $1,050.00, the difference between the value of said propérty as shown and estimated by said advertisement and the true value of said property by an actual count of the trees upon the same; may all proper accounts be ordered and taken; and all such other and general relief*194 be granted to your plaintiff as to equity seems fit and good conscience may require.”
The chief ground relied upon in support of the demurrer is that the bill shows on its face that it was not good as a bill for rescission, and asserts a purely legal demand for damages cognizable only in a court of law.
We think it reasonably clear that the bill does not state a proper case for rescission. It alleges that after the complainant was apprised in July, 1916, by his own representative and caretaker, Clark, as to the shortage in the number of old trees, he neither at that time nor at any other time before the bringing of this suit offered to return the property, or even intimated any desire to do so. Upon the contrary, he made no request or suggestion, so far as the bill indicates, for any settlement or redress except a rebate on the purchase price. Under these circumstances he must be regarded as having elected to retain the property, and to have thereby waived his right to have a rescission of the contract. Hurt v. Miller, 95 Va. 32, 41, 27 S. E. 831.
The proof sustains the material allegations of the bill. We do not understand it to be seriously contended that upon the facts the complainant is not entitled to proper compensation for the loss of the trees both against the principal, Logwood, and his agent, and if there were any such contention we would have no difficulty in rejecting it. The only questions in this case are as to the form of procedure and the measure of relief.
We come now to the only other assignment of error requiring attention, and under this assignment it is claimed that if the defendants were liable to the plaintiff, “the value of 168 trees without reference either to the purchase price paid for the property or the value of the property actually
We have held that this case is controlled by the same principles as if part of the acreage instead of part of the trees had been short; and the measure of recovery must be fixed accordingly.
The evidence shows that the false representations affected the substance of the thing contracted for, and the purchaser, therefore, originally had two remedies—he could restore the property and have a rescission of the contract, or he could keep the property and have compensation for the loss. He has by his conduct elected to adopt the latter remedy. What then is to be the measure of his compensation?
In Hoback v. Kilgores, 26 Gratt. (67 Va.) 442, 21 Am. Rep. 317 (a suit for a specific performance), there was a shortage of acreage, but there were upon a portion of the land acquired by the vendee improvements consisting of a dwelling house, outhouses, a tanyard and a gristmill, the value of which had evidently influenced the purchase price. This court, in an opinion by Judge Moncure, while recognizing the general rule as laid down in Blessing v. Beatty that in cases of mere deficiency in quantity, compensation is to be awarded according to the acreage value of the land, held that the improvements above mentioned required a departure from the general rule, and said:
*198 “In this case the just and true measure, of compensation is according to the average value of the land without the improvements considering both together to be worth the contract price of fourteen hundred dollars, estimating the quantity of the land, as the parties did, at one hundred and twenty-seven and a half acres.”
In Watson v. Hoy, 28 Gratt. (69 Va.) 698, 713 (a judicial sale in which the purchaser after confirmation was allowed an abatement of the purchase price for a deficiency of acreage), the court, in an opinion by Judge E. C. Burks, after calling attention to the fact that there were on the land actually acquired by the purchaser certain valuable buildings, bridge privileges and fisheries, which must have entered largely into the agreed price for the entire estate, held that in fixing the amount of the abatement the relative value of these improvements should be deducted from the entire purchase price for the whole estate, and the sum remaining should be used in determining the average price per acre.
In Yost v. Mallicotte, 77 Va. 610 (a suit for an abatement of price on account of deficiency in the acreage), this court, in an opinion by Judge Lacy, applied the general rule of the average price per acre, and reversed the lower court which had fixed the compensation for the deficiency by first ascertaining and deducting from the price of the whole the value of the improvements, the latter court having apparently followed Hoback v. Kilgores, supra, and Watson v. Hoy, supra. Upon the facts it is difficult to reconcile the court’s refusal to give any consideration to the valuable improvements in Yost v. Mallicotte with the rule of decision as settled in the other two cases last above cited, but the rune itself was not in any way changed by the Yost Case, because that case expressly recognized the rule as laid down in the other two cases and disregarded the improvements because, as the opinion held, they were not of sufficient importance to constitute an exception to the rule.
The rule as gathered from the foregoing cases seems to be that when improvements or other features of peculiar value form a part of the realty sold, the value in fixing compensation for a deficiency in the substance of the thing sold is to be based upon the agreed price for the whole estate, and this rule seems to us to be entirely in accord with reason and justice.
The decree of reference found as a matter of fact that the complainant (who was shown to have bought for a total price of $3,000.00) made his calculation to buy and was induced to buy on the belief that there were 500 bearing trees (the greater part of which were represented as Albemarle Pippins), when in fact only 332 bearing trees were on the land, and of these only 126 were Albemarle Pippins.
It is insisted that the commissioner’s allowance of $1,000 for 168 trees means that if the whole 500 trees had been lost, the damage would have been equal to the entire purchase price of the land, and the purchaser would have received the land and the young trees free. This contention
There is no error in the decree to the prejudice of the appellants, and it must be affirmed.
Affirmed.