249 S.W. 41 | Mo. | 1923
Lead Opinion
Action on contract for sale of real estate.
Plaintiff sued for damages for an alleged breach of said contract, and defendant answered by invoking equity for a rescission, on the grounds of plaintiff's alleged failure to perform and for fraud in its procurement. Defendant prevailed below, and had a decree in accordance with his prayer.
After conventional motions, plaintiff has appealed to this court, averring sundry errors, chief of which is that the judgment or decree is for the wrong party. The contract sued on is as follows:
"It is agreed by and between H.R. McCaw, party of the first part, and William O'Malley, party of the second part, that said first party has sold and second party bought the following described real estate in Phelps County, Missouri, described as the east half of the southwest quarter of section twenty-six, and the east half of north-west quarter of section thirty-five, all in township thirty-seven, range eight west, containing 160 acres, for the price and sum of $12,500 which second party agrees to pay the first party as follows: $500 cash the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, $3000 to be paid within two weeks from this date, second party further to assume and agree to pay as part of the consideration thereof a deed of trust against said lands for $2500 with accrued interest thereon, the balance of said purchase price to be paid by a good and bankable note given by second party and being such a note as first party will be able *408 to negotiate to the bank for its face value without recourse on said first party. It is further agreed that second party is to have wagon, wheat drill and corn planted, now on farm without further payment therefor. It is further agreed that possession shall be delivered to second party within two weeks or as soon thereafterwards as legally possible. It is further agreed that first party shall convey to said second party said lands by good and sufficient warranty deed upon compliance by second party with the terms of this contract.
"It is further agreed that second party shall convey to first party by sufficient deed one quarter acre of ground near Piney River heretofore agreed to.
"Witness our hands this 23rd day of March, 1920.
"H.R. McCaw, "W.F. O'Malley.
"S.N. Lorts, Witness."
The petition alleged the due execution and delivery of said contract and full compliance therewith by appellant, and that according to the terms thereof five hundred dollars was paid at its execution by respondent, and that in lieu of the cash payment of three thousand dollars a bankable note for $3000 was executed by respondent, and delivered to appellant, upon which appellant obtained twenty-seven hundred and sixty dollars, with the agreement that the discount of two hundred and forty dollars should be added to the note to cover the balance, so that the final note contemplated by the contract should be for sixty-seven hundred and forty dollars; that respondent went into possession of said real estate, but has refused to carry out the terms and provisions of said contract by executing and delivering to appellant a bankable note for $6740, for which amount appellant prayed judgment. It was further alleged that respondent had agreed to convey to appellant a small parcel of ground (one-quarter acre) near Piney River, and for his failure so to convey appellant prayed judgment for the further sum of one hundred dollars. Appellant averred that he had tendered deed to said premises, and renewed this tender in his petition. *409
Respondent's answer admitted the execution and delivery of the contract sued on and the payment of five hundred dollars; the execution and delivery of the three thousand dollar note mentioned in appellant's petition, and admitted that said note having been given in lieu of cash, respondent had agreed to bear the expense of the discount in the sum of $240, and that it had been agreed that said discount, being the equivalent of one year's interest at eight per cent, should be added to the note to cover the balance of the purchase price, making such balance sixty-seven hundred and forty dollars.
For his affirmative defense, respondent said that he had tendered to appellant a note for $6740, representing the balance aforesaid, and had demanded of appellant a deed to said real estate, in accordance with said contract, but that appellant failed, neglected and refused to accept said note in final settlement of the full consideration moving to appellant, and had refused to deliver to respondent a deed to said premises, as required by said contract.
Respondent averred that the conduct of the plaintiff in failing and refusing to accept the note to cover the balance of the purchase price, and his failure to make, execute and deliver to respondent a deed to said premises had prevented the respondent from carrying out his part of the contract, and upon that ground he prayed the court for a rescission.
For another affirmative defense, respondent charged fraud in the purchase and sale of said premises, as follows:
That the respondent was wholly unacquainted with the value of farm lands in Phelps County, Missouri; that one Fred King was the agent of appellant, and that respondent duly informed both King and appellant of his ignorance of farm land values in Phelps County; that he had the utmost confidence in the truthfulness and the integrity of both the appellant and the said Fred King, he having been acquainted with the latter since his boyhood and had also known the appellant for many years; that the appellant and his agent, King, "for the *410 purpose of inducing the defendant to purchase said farm, represented and stated to the defendant that said farm was well worth the sum of twelve thousand five hundred dollars; that the plaintiff paid for said farm, when he purchased the same, the sum of eleven thousand five hundred dollars; that all the lands enclosed in the fence on said farm belonged to the plaintiff; that said farm had eighty acres of bottom land on it in cultivation; that the said Fred King was not the agent of the plaintiff in the selling of said farm, and was to receive no commission from the plaintiff, in the event the said farm was sold to the defendant; that the said Fred King was acting solely in behalf of the defendant on account of his friendship for the defendant;" that he relied on said statements and believed them to be true, and that he was thereby induced to execute the contract set out in appellant's petition. There were averments of the falsity of each and all of these allegations and a prayer for a rescission of the contract and for judgment against appellant for payments made, and that same should be a lien on the land in suit.
The replication put in issue all the matter set up in respondent's answer.
Upon a trial respondent had a decree for a rescission of the contract, and a further judgment for thirty-two hundred and sixty dollars, representing moneys paid by respondent, with interest at six per cent from the 15th day of April, 1920. In turn the respondent was adjudged to pay for the use of said premises, growing out of his possession, the sum of thirty dollars per month from April 15, 1920, the latter judgment to be credited on the former. The court further adjudged in relation to the mortgage for twenty-five hundred dollars mentioned in the contract, that either the respondent or appellant should have the right to pay off and discharge said obligation, both principal and interest, and that when paid, such payments should stand as a valid lien against said property.
The evidence on the part of respondents showed that respondent at the time he contracted for the purchase of *411 said farm, resided in Texas County, Missouri, about three miles from the Phelps County line, and that he had lived there for many years; that the farm in controversy was about four miles from Rolla; that Rolla had been used by respondent as his trading point; that he had been in the habit of "going to Rolla once or twice a year and sometimes maybe a dozen times a year;" that the land in suit lay about one-fourth of a mile from the road used by respondent in going to Rolla; that respondent was a farmer and had pursued this occupation practically all his life in Texas County, which county adjoins Phelps County; that he knew the difference between bottom land and hill land, and was familiar with land conditions of Texas County, but said that he was "not familiar with farm values generally in this part."
On the evening of the 22nd of March, 1920, the day before the contract was executed, respondent came to Rolla, where he made inquiries on the evening of that day "from first one and another, where I could buy a little place; a little place was what I wanted, and I run on to a jitney driver, who I had told to find out about this place that Mr. McCaw bought, after he sold my place. . . . The jitney driver directed me to McCaw, said that McCaw had bought a place a few days before that; I met McCaw on the street that night and asked him if he would sell the farm and he said he didn't want to. . . . He told me to come down in the morning; that he would study about it; I went down next morning and asked him if he had made up his mind and he said that he had made up his mind that he wouldn't take less than one hundred dollars an acre, and that there were 160 acres in the tract, 104 in cultivation and 80 acres in the bottom. I said if that was the price of it, I didn't want any $100 an acre land; and that I couldn't pay that; and about that time King took me off to one side and said I can get you the place for less than that, as I helped get the place for McCaw, so we (Fred King and myself) went out and looked at the place. We went from McCaw's in King's car." According to respondent's testimony, he "went up about middle ways on the place on a kind of a *412 high knoll," and there he inquired of King whether all the land there pointed out to him was McCaw's, and was told that all the land inside of the fence was McCaw's; that on the return trip King urged him to buy the farm; that "it is worth $13,000;" "that McCaw didn't know the worth of the land," and that if respondent lost his opportunity he would lose a bargain. He then testified, "I said that I would go back and look at the place again." Thereafter respondent and King went out to look at another farm, and on their return King said to respondent concerning appellant's farm, "Now, if you get that for $12,500, you had better take it, it is the best bargain in this country," and upon a suggestion from respondent that he did not know the value of the place, as he had not looked it over, King said, "You leave that to me, I am telling you as a friend. I am not working for McCaw, I am working for you." Upon their return to McCaw's place of business at Rolla, respondent said to King, "If you say the place is worth the money, I will take it." Thereupon further negotiations with McCaw were had, resulting in the contract in suit. There was much testimony as to the value of said land, and testimony tending to support the allegations of respondent's answer in the matter of representations.
In the view we shall express on the case, it is unnecessary to set out in detail in this statement further testimony. Such additional facts as may seem pertinent will be noted and discussed in the course of the opinion.
I. Respondent admits the execution and delivery of the contract sued on, but he does not pretend that he has complied with the terms thereof with respect to the execution and delivery of a "bankable note" for the balance of the purchase price, nor did he tender deed for one-quarter acre on Piney River. HeRescission. seeks to evade these obligations, imposed by the contract, by the averment that the contract was modified in such way as to permit him to supply a note executed by himself and sureties who were solvent. Under the law, he could not vary the terms of this written contract *413
in that way, and these allegations of his answer should have been stricken out, upon timely motion, and in the absence of such motion, the court should have sustained appellant's objection to testimony tending to show such modification. The contract was to convey real estate, and was within the Statutes of Frauds, and by statute it was required to be in writing, and its terms could not be eked out by parol. [Anderson v. Hall,
Plaintiff made timely objections to the introduction of testimony tending to vary the terms of said contract, and in this he should have been sustained. This disposes of respondent's contention that there should be a rescission of said contract, because of the failure of plaintiff to perform, as his only complaint in that particular is that plaintiff had refused to carry out the contract, as modified by parol.
II. As a postulate to a discussion of the charge of fraud, we may observe that in an action for false representations, the burden is upon the plaintiff (defendant herein) to establish by proof that there was not only a falseFalse representation, but that he relied upon it andRepresentations. that such reliance "was an act of ordinary prudence," and that such representations thus prudently relied upon influenced plaintiff to his damage. [Brown v. Railroad,
It follows from the foregoing that "where ordinary care and prudence are sufficient for full protection, it is the duty of the party to make use of them. Therefore, if false representations are made regarding matters of *414
fact, and the means of knowledge are at hand and equally available to both parties, and the party, instead of resorting to them, sees fit to trust himself in the hands of one whose interest it is to mislead him, the law, in general, will leave him where he has been placed by his own imprudent confidence." [Brown v. Railroad, supra; 1 Cooley on Torts (3 Ed.) 570; Lewis v. Land Co.,
Where the vendee knows the facts, or may know them by the exercise of ordinary prudence, he must form his own opinions and act on his own judgment. [Funding Fdry. Co. v. Heskett,
Neither law nor equity will afford relief on the ground of false representation to one with equal means of information, who fails to resort to such means. [Hines v. Royce, 127 Mo. App. l.c. 722; Brauchman v. Leighton,
In the instant case, respondent was a farmer, residing in an adjoining county. It did not appear from the testimony that the general character of farm lands in the vicinity where respondent resided was different from that in controversy. He approached appellant on the subject of purchasing said land, presumably having made previous inquiries concerning it, and determined in his mind to negotiate for it. Appellant was not then in a mood to sell, but upon another interview evinced a disposition to sell, and named a price which was then objectionable to respondent, indicating some knowledge of values on respondent's part. Without any suggestion from appellant, respondent went with King, a jitney driver, to look over the farm. He saw it, and being a practical farmer was undoubtedly capable of exercising a better judgment as to its value than King, the jitney driver. He did not accept the statement of McCaw as *415 to its value, but did what any prudent man in the same situation would insist upon doing, went for a personal inspection. He testified that King did not represent him, and that he did not pay King for his services, and yet he complains that King told him that his (King's) interest was only in respondent, and that relying on King's judgment, as to its value, he entered into the contract in question. The doctrine of caveat emptor applies with full force and vigor under such circumstances. It is idle for respondent to pretend, under the circumstances, that he was deceived by King, as to his agency.
III. The allegation that respondent was deceived as to the value of the land, is untenable. Representations as to the value do not ordinarily constitute fraud. [Anderson v. McPike,
IV. Neither can respondent obtain relief because of any representations made to him regarding the cost of said farm to appellant, for it is fundamental that the mere statement by the vendor of what an article cost him would not be regardedCost. as a matter on which a vendee should rely where, as here, the vendee had an unrestricted opportunity to learn the actual value of the property and where, as here, he actually undertook to ascertain such value. [Fisher v. Seitz,
Moreover, the testimony in this case was too vague and indefinite as to the accuracy of such representations as to cost, even if made. *416
V. The charge that the acreage in the bottom was misrepresented by appellant, falls within the general principles announced in the foregoing. Mere exaggerations as to qualities do not constitute grounds for action in deceit. [U.S. v. NewQualities. South Farm Home Co.,
VI. The testimony as to land under fence, pointed out as the property of appellant, and yet belonging to somebody else, was too vague and indefinite to justify relief. There were intimations that there was a parcel of ground notFence as belonging to appellant and yet under his fence, but itBoundary. appeared that appellant and respondent had agreed that he should have a rebate of $100 for every acre, over one and one-half acres, not belonging to appellant, and the matter appears to have ended at that. The testimony would not support a finding on that subject.
VII. According to his own testimony, respondent at a time when he believed that King was working for him, willingly accepted and acted upon King's statement "that McCaw didn't know the worth of the land," and that by taking it at $12,500 he wasClean Hands. getting it at a great bargain. He was apparently willing to utilize this apparent advantage over McCaw, and he should not be heard to complain here, as he is within the maxim of equity jurisprudence to the effect that "he who comes into equity must come with clean hands." [Stegmann v. Weeke,
VIII. For another reason, respondent is not entitled to relief in this case. After the contract of sale was entered into, he moved onto the premises in controversy where he remained at the time the suit was filed and at the time of the trialDiscovery: and, during all of which and particularly prior toWaiver. the filing of suit, he treated the transaction as a contract. Note the following question and answer:
"Q. After you had learned of these things that you have testified to about the shortage of land and the other matters that you have complained of, you offered this note and mortgage? A. Yes, sir."
Under such circumstances, he is not entitled to recover, for it is elementary that the right to rescind a contract on the ground of fraud must be exercised on the discovery of the fraud. [Taylor v. Short,
If, moreover, the party deceived treats the transaction as a contract after discovery of the fraud, he waives the fraud by continuing to deal with the property emanating from the fraud. [Taylor v. Short, supra; City Light Co. v. Machine Co.,
Upon the discovery of a fraud by the defrauded party he is put to his election either to stand upon his contract or to rescind it, and when a party seeks to rescind a contract on the grounds of fraud, he must do so unequivocally and within a reasonable time. [Window Co. v. Cornice Co.,
From the foregoing, it must follow that the judgment of the learned chancellor below was for the wrong party, and as the facts set up in appellant's petition are admitted upon the record he is entitled to judgment against the respondent for the balance of the purchase price, in the sum of sixty-seven hundred and forty dollars.
Relative to the conveyance of one-quarter acre on Piney River as "heretofore agreed to," for which appellant fixes his damages at $100, there was no testimony *418 as to the value thereof and this item must be treated as abandoned by appellant.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the chancellor below be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in accordance with the prayer of plaintiff's petition, save as to the alleged value of the one-quarter acre on Piney River.
It is so ordered. Railey and Davis, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by REEVES, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.