105 Tenn. 319 | Tenn. | 1900
This bill was filed for the rescission of a sale of land.
On the 8th of July, 1896, J'no. 0. Hill and wife executed a deed to the complainant, Mrs. M, 0. McElya, for a house and lot in Huntingdon at the price of $1,500. Complainant paid $800 in cash, and for the balance of purchase money executed two notes, each for the sum of $350, payable in one and two years respectively. The first note was credited by the sum of $130, the value of a horse and wagon which defendants accepted in part payment of the note. Shortly after the purchase complainant went into possession of the property.
On the 27th of October, 1897, after the maturity of the first note and fifteen months after the purchase, complainant filed this .bill Seeking a rescission upon the ground of fraud in the sale. She charged that defendants were occupying the property as a boarding house; that complainant had purchased the property in order to enter upon the same business, and that it was a condition of the contract of purchase that defendants should not • carry on the same business in the town of Huntingdon; that they would assist complainant in securing boarders and lend her their influence. The bill alleged that defendants, in
Defendants answered the bill, denying all the 'allegations of fraud and averring a full compliance with the contract, denying any agreement to-abandon the • boarding house business, and averring • that the property was fully worth the price agreed to be paid.
Defendants on same day filed an original bill against complainant and the surety on the notes, for the collection of the balance of the purchase money and the enforcement of vendor’s lien. The 1¡wo causes were consolidated and heard together.
A jury was demanded by complainant’s solicitor, who formulated twenty issues to be submitted for their determination. The record recites “the Court.
Complainant’s solicitor excepted to the action of the Court in disallowing nineteen of the issues submitted by him, and further he excepted to the last two issues formulated by the Court. There was no exception to the first issue formulated by the Court, which was, viz.:
“Was the sale and conveyance of the land set out in the pleadings in these causes by Jno. C. Hill and wife to M. C. McElya fraudulent?”
This was the only issue summitted to the jury, and under the charge of the Court a verdict was rendered that the sale was not fraudulent. On this verdict the Court pronounced a decree in favor of the defendants and rendered judgment for balance of the purchase money.
Mrs. McElya appealed and has assigned errors;
The first assignment is that the Court erred in not submitting to the jury the nineteen issues of fact presented by complainant’s solicitor.
It has been held that an issue should not be directed on a question the decision of which is immaterial or unessential to the determination of the suit. Where the issues are very numerous or very minute, or so grouped that confusion and mistake by a jury may be expected, the Court should decide -them itself and not send them to a
We have carefully examined the nineteen issues tendered by' complainant’s solicitor, and find that many of them were wholly immaterial and that none of them went to the whole case. The gravamen of complainant’s suit for rescission was fraud, which question was to be determined upon a consideration of all the facts' and circumstances in the case. Complainant’s counsel • sought to make every fact tending to show fraud the basis of a separate issue, thus indefinitely multiplying the issues to the dismay and confusion of the jury,
The second assignment is that the Chancellor erred in submitting to the jury, on his own motion, an insufficient issue which raised a mixed question of law and fact.
Section 62S5, Shannon’s Code, provides, viz.: “The issues shall be made up by the parties under the direction of the Court and set forth briefly and clearly the true questions of fact' to be tried.”
It is true that when the Chancellor ' declined to submit the multitude of issues tendered by complainant’s solicitor, he then proceeded to formulate three issues which he thought went to the whole case. Complainant’s solicitor objected to the last two, but did not object to the first, issue. Thereupon the Chancellor withdrew the last two and submitted only the first issue, which was, viz.: “Was the sale and conveyances of lands set out in the pleadings in this cause by Jno. C. Hill and wife to Mrs. M. 0. MeElya fraudulent?”
It is objected now, for the first time in this Court, that this issue raises a compound question of law and fact which was improper for the consideration of the jury. Such mixed questions of law and fact frequently arise and are constantly passed on by juries. Questions of negligence and of probable cause in actions for malicious prosemition are mixed questions of law and fact, yet they are
In the present case the Chancellor adopted the former method, and in liis charge to the jury
The fourth assignment of error is that the Court erred in the following instruction to the jury, viz.: “In this connection you are instructed that representations, if they are shown to have been made, as to the value of the property out of which this controversy has grown, as to the profits of keeping boarders, ’ and as to whether Mrs. McElya could fill her house with boarders, or expressions of opinion as to the same, although the same may have been extravagant, will not amount to a fraud.” Maney v. Porter, 3 Hum., 347. It is insisted this was an error, for the reason that the value of the property was one of the main issues; that Hill represented it to be worth $1,500, when it was worth only about $800 or $900. The Court immediately followed the above instruction with this statement of the law, viz.: “It is material in this case that you shall consider the question as to the value of the property sold and purchased at the time of the sale with a Hew of determining the truth as to the issue submitted. ’ If it should appear that the property in question was sold to Mrs. McElya at a grossly exorbitant price, that is greatly in ex
The sixth assignment of error is that the Chancellor erred in the following instruction, viz.: “If you find the fact to be as insisted upon by counsel for Mrs. McElya, as heretofore in these instructions explained to you, you should find the issue in the affirmative; that is, the sale and conveyance was fraudulent. If, .however, you shall find the facts to be as insisted upon by defendant’s solicitor, as heretofore explained in these instructions, you will find the issue in the negative.”
It is said this was error for the reason that the insistances of the respective counsel were not evidence. If this had been said by the Court, we agree with counsel that it would have been erroneous. . But ■ it will be observed that when the Court speaks of the contentions of counsel it is coupled with the words, “as heretofore in these instructions explained to you.” The Court clearly had reference here to his hypothetical statements of the contentions of both sides.
The seventh assignment of error is that the
If the covenants of the deed of warranty, seizin, right to convey or against incumbrances be broken and the grantor is insolvent, a Court of equity may restrain him from proceeding to collect the whole amount due 'for the purchase money, and may offset the ' damages occasioned by the breach of the covenants against such unpaid purchase money. Young v. Butter, 1 Head, 647.
On the subject of defective title and incum-brances the Court charged the jury, viz.: “It is insisted by counsel for Mrs. McElya that at the time of the sale of the property in controversy to her, a portion thereof was incumbered by a mortgage to the Southern Building and Loan Association and the balance thereof by mortgage to the Huntingdon Building and Loan Association; that the deeds to Hill had not then been recorded,
“If you shall find that at the date of the conveyance to Mrs. McElya that Ilill and wife were of opinion that the mortgage to the Southern Building and Loan Association had been satisfied, and that as to this they were mistaken, the fact
It will be observed that the Chancellor in these instructions submits to the jury the question whether defendants concealed the said incumbrances from complainant at date of sale, proceeding alone upon the theory of fraud. But as we have already seen, a purchaser may be entitled to relief, in the absence of fraud, where the title is defective or the land incumbered and the vendor wholly insolvent. The Chancellor in his original charge ignored this aspect of the case, and there was no request from complainant’s counsel for such an instruction, although fourteen supplemental requests were submitted by him. We are of opinion, however, upon examination of the record, that such an instruction would have been immaterial, since the proof shows that both of said mortgages have been satisfied. It is wholly immaterial whether
In conclusion, we find the verdict of the jury and the charge of the Court are amply supported by the evidence.
Where, a chancery cause is tried by a jury the verdict has the same force and effect as a verdict in a law cause, and will not be disturbed on appeal if there is any material evidence to support it. Scruggs v. Heiskell, 95 Tenn., 455; Shannon’s Code, § 6286.
Affirmed.