14 Pa. Super. 175 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
This action is in trespass and the plaintiff’s statement contains all the elements essential to an action on the case for deceit. The plaintiff’s statement sets forth that the defendant “unlawfully, fraudulently and deceitfully did represent and state to the said plaintiff that he, the said defendant, had a license, duly granted to him by the court of quarter ^sessions of Luzerne county, for the sale of liquors, etc., by retail in a house which he claimed to own in the Diamond Edition of Hazelton, in said county, which said license would not expire until the 1st day of April, 1898. ' And that if the said plaintiff would pay him, the said defendant, the sum of $70.00 for said
The only misrepresentation of which the statement charges the defendant to hare been guilty was that he had a license
The pleadings being in this condition at the trial, the learned court below permitted the plaintiff, against the objection of defendant, to prove .that he had in this house sold liquors without a license; that he had, in regular order, been indicted for that offense; that he had entered a plea of guilty, and that he had, as required by law, been sentenced to jail and fined, having remained a prisoner six months. Because of the admission of this evidence we have the first specification of error. That this evidence was not admissible under the pleadings seems clear. If the defendant had done or omitted to do anything which might have naturally and necessarily led to the imprisonment of the plaintiff, that act or omission ought to have been charged in the statement. 1 Chitty’s Pleading, 16th Am. ed., 398. The misrepresentation with which the defendant was charged could have affected only the estate of the plaintiff; its only result could have been to deprive him of property, or disappoint him in profits. The evidence admitted under this bill of exceptions introduced a new cause of action, which it was attempted to found upon representations made a considerable time after the plaintiff had paid his money. The testimony upon this branch of the case was all taken under exception,
The admissibility of this evidence, however, involves more than the mere question of pleading. Without regard to the averments of the statement, the evidence ought to have been excluded. The evidence was presented and admitted upon the theory that if the plaintiff had been led by the defendant into a mistake of law, he was entitled to recover damages for the injury which he suffered because of the course of action into which he was led by that mistake. The general principle that every one is conclusively presumed to know the law is not without its exceptions. Where in the making of a contract there has been a mutual mistake, or where one who knows the law and knows another to be ignorant thereof fraudulently misleads him as to the legal effect of a contract, or where' one who is shown to have been ignorant of the law is misled by another with whom he stands in a confidential relation, equity may give relief. In such cases he who has apparently acquired legal rights through his own fraud will not be permitted to' assert them, and the misrepresentations must be made good: Rankin v. Mortimere, 7 Watts, 372; Tyson v. Passmore, 2 Pa. 122; Light v. Light, 21 Pa. 407; Gross v. Leber, 47 Pa. 520; Whelen’s Appeal, 70 Pa. 410; McAninch v. Laughlin, 13 Pa. 371. The effect of this principle as applied to the present case, even if the representations by the defendant, testified to
A party may, because he has been fraudulently misled, be relieved from the legal effects of a lawful contract, but in no case can he recover damages where he must found his claim in his own violation of a criminal statute. The objection to a claim founded in the transgression of a positive law of the state may be asserted by the defendant with bad grace, but it must be allowed. It is enforced, not for his sake, but because it is founded in general principles of public policy, of which the advantage to the defendant is incidental. “No court will lend its aid to a man who founds his cause of action upon an immoral or illegal act.” “If the cause of action appears to arise ex turpi causa, or the transgression of a positive law of this country, there, the court says, he has no right to be assisted. It is upon this ground the court goes, not for the sake of the defendant, but because they will not lend their aid to such a plaintiff.” This plaintiff was convicted upon his own plea of guilty, and no question can arise as to the justice of his imprisonment. If the defendant bad procured the conviction of the plaintiff upon perjured testimony, through the bribery of jurors, or the corruption of justice in any other manner, an entirely different question would have been presented. In his attempt to connect his imprisonment with the alleged deceit practiced by the defendant, it was necessary for the plaintiff to show that he had actually sold liquors in violation of law, that he had been convicted in a court of competent jurisdiction, and that he had justly been imprisoned under the law of the state. The rule of law must be enforced whether the action is in assumpsit or trespass; whether upon a contract forbidden by law, or for damages resulting from an act of the plaintiff which involved a crime. In this state there is no distinction, in the application of this rule, between contracts or acts which
Having admitted the evidence of plaintiff’s violation of the law and his imprisonment as a consequence, the court naturally fell into error in instructing the jury as to the measure of damages in case of a finding in favor of the plaintiff. While the instruction complained of incidentally suggested to the jury that the fundamental idea of damages in such cases was compensation, the whole tenor of the instruction was such as to lead the jury to believe that the amount of damages rested entirely in their discretion, and that there was no element thereof which was to be determined in accordance with any fixed principle of law. It is barely possible that if the wrongs for which the plaintiff sought to recover damages had affected his person or reputation alone, the instructions might have been held to be proper. But this plaintiff was claiming damages for an injury to his rights of property, and, no matter what else may have been involved in the case, the damages to such rights of property were to be ascertained according to well recognized rules. When a vendor sells property, or the right to exercise a privilege, with a fraudulent representation of ownership, his vendee may recover damages for the deceit according to the measure applicable to a breach of an express warranty. Let it be conceded that the plaintiff had sufficiently averred in his statement and established by evidence that the defendant had represented himself to be the owner of a license, which he agreed to transfer ; or, further, that plaintiff had averred and proved that defendant had represented that the contract into which the parties had entered vested in the plaintiff a right to sell liquors at the
The language of the charge complained of in the fifth specification of error is, as a statement of an abstract principle of law, undoubtedly sound. We have held, however, in disposing of the first assignment of error that this principle does not apply to a case in which the plaintiff must found his claim in his own violation of a statute which makes his act punishable by a fine and imprisonment. The learned court ought to have instructed the jury that the plaintiff could not recover damages for the injury resulting from his conviction of a crime, of which he was guilty, and the punishment which was inflicted upon him in accordance with law.
The sixth, seventh and eighth assignments of error are not well founded. The agreement to transfer the license was not in itself a violation of law. If the defendant agreed to transfer or assign to plaintiff his rights under a license which he himself did not hold, he cannot escape the consequences of his fraud and retain the money received by his own deceit, by asserting that the court would not in any event have had jurisdiction to issue a license to the plaintiff. So far as the injury to his rights of property was concerned, the plaintiff presented a case free from the taint of illegality, and was entitled to damages if the. jury believed that he had been fraudulently deceived. In the making of the contract no illegal intent had been carried into execution. “ The law does not impose, as a penalty for such intent, immunity to him who has plundered one guilty of it. The illegal intention must be accompanied by an act which is criminal or prohibited by law, in order to make the transaction illegal: ” Smith v. Blachley, 188 Pa. 550. The plaintiff pro
Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.