87 W. Va. 422 | W. Va. | 1920
The decree of the circuit court complained of refused the plaintiff relief and dismissed her bill brought for the purpose of setting aside a deed which she claims was procured from her by fraud and misrepresentation upon the part of the defendant Benj. Hurvitz.
Prior to the death of JVM. Lopinsky in January, 1914, he .txid the defendant Benj. Hurvitz had been partners in business for a number of years. They conducted a mercantile business at Mt. Hope, in the county of Fayette, as partners, and in connection with this business they had acquired several pieces of real estate, among them a store building and the lot upon which it is situate, at Beckley, in Raleigh county. They, together with E. H. Lopinsky, a brother of J. M. Lopinsky, were also partners in a mercantile business in the town of Welch, in McDowell county. J. M. Lopinsky died in January, 1914, and his will devised all of his estate of every kind and character to his wife, the plaintiff in this suit. Among the asset? of her husband thus passing to her was his interest in this real estate at Beckley. It appears without contradiction that she was entirely ignorant of her husband’s business affairs, knowing only in a general way what property he had, and that -as to the property at Beckley she did not even know whether-the house was a brick house or a frame house, but only knew that it was a storehouse owned by her husband and the defendant Benj. Hurvitz. She claims that a short time after her hus
While, perhaps, plaintiff and the defendant Benj. Hurvitz were in the strict sense of the term not partners in this business, still the relations existing between them were of a like confidential character. Hurvitz was in -charge of the partnership business at Mt. Hope, including this real estate, acting as the agent for both of the owners. In addition to this the defendant Sarah Hurvitz is ■ a sister of the plaintiff, and there had always been between the Hurvitzes and the Lopinskys very close and intimate personal, as well as business, relations, so that it may be said that the defendant Benj. Hurvitz occupied a position of trust in connection with this property, and was under obligation before acquiring it to fully inform his co-owner of all circumstances and facts in connection with it which could in any way be material. This obligation was particularly strong upon him in this ease, for the reason that he was fully advised that the plaintiff was entirely ignorant of the value of the property, and of the circumstances existing in relation to it. This principle is fully sustained by the following authorities: McKinley v. Lynch, 58 W. Va. 44; Thorne v. Brown, 63 W. Va.
That the property was not depreciating in value at the time' of the. purchase is fully established by the evidence. Every witness introduced in the case on either side, except the defendants, freely admits that the property had appreciated in value continuously from the time it was purchased by Hurvitz and Lopinsky in 1907 up to the time the depositions were taken, and that just previous to the purchase of it by Hurvitz, because of a destructive lire in the town of Becldey, there was an extraordinary demand for business buildings of this character. That Hurvitz could not get insurance on the property, sufficiently appears, but this was because of the character of the owner rather than the character of the property. As soon as the title became vested in Prince he procured insurance on it, and it was still insured at the time the testimony was taken. Hurvitz contends that he was willing to part with the property for six thousand dollars, but that he could get no one to purchase it at that price, and that because nobody else would give six thousand dollars for it, he sold it to his wife for sixty-five hundred dollars, while the contention of the plaintiff is that he, realizing that it was a valuable piece of property, used the device which he did to get her title, and acquire the property for himself at an inadequate price. It is not denied that when he went to Welch to see the plaintiff, in addition to having a conference with her, he also conferred with one Colonel H. Bank, with a view to having him advise with plaintiff in regard to the sale of the property. Colonel Bank testifies that Hurvitz made substatially the same representations to him as to the conditions surrounding the property that the plaintiff says he made to her, and that when the plaintiff advised with him as to the propriety of making the sale of the property under
Our conclusion is that the defendant Benjamin Hurvitz did not act with entire frankness and honesty toward the plaintiff, to whom he stood in a relation of trust and confidence, and owed the highest duty to disclose everything within his knowledge respecting this property before making the purchase, and that by failing- to disclose the facts, and by conveying to her information which was false and deceptive, he secured a bargain which a court of equity will not allow him to retain.
Reversed, decree for plaintiff, remanded.