221 P. 1102 | Idaho | 1923
— This is an action by the Miller-Cahoon Company, a foreign corporation, to foreclose real estate and chattel mortgages upon property situate in Power county, Idaho. The indebtedness was evidenced by four notes secured by mortgages executed October 22, 1913, to the E'merson-Brantingham Implement Company, also a foreign corporation, these notes being later indorsed to plaintiff.
Both of these corporations had qualified to do business in this state. During the course of the trial, respondents sought to show that appellant Miller-Cahoon Company, at the time of the commencement of this action,
The notes aggregated $2000, and were given for the purchase price of a threshing outfit, including a tractor used for operating the separator. Respondents admit the execution of the notes and mortgages securing the same, but seek to avoid payment on the ground of fraud and misrepresentation, and also file a cross-complaint asking for judgment in the sum of $3,000' against appellant on account of labor performed and money expended upon this machinery in an effort to operate the same.
In addition to respondents Wade and his wife, who executed the original notes and mortgages, the complaint made a large number of other parties defendants in this action, and thereafter additional parties were permitted to intervene, so that the pleadings are very voluminous, covering approximately 170 pages of the record. However, this appeal presents for review only the decree against the appellant Miller-Cahoon Company in favor of respondents Wade, it being adjudged that the notes and mortgages sought to be foreclosed were null and void, on account of fraudulent representations used in procuring the execution of such notes and mortgages, and they were ordered canceled. Certain relief is granted to various other defendants and inter - venors, but no appeal having been taken from any of such orders or judgments except the one presented here by the Miller-Cahoon Company against Wade and his wife, consideration of the remaining portions of the decree is not necessary.
Appellant assigns as error: (1) that the trial court erred in finding that plaintiff was not entitled to file and prosecute this action; (2) that plaintiff and its predecessor in the notes and mortgages, the Emerson-Brantingham Implement Company, obtained the same from the Wades through fraud; (3) that there was error in admitting oral evidence which tended to vary and modify the terms of the written instruments; (4) in decreeing that the notes and mortgages be
The evidence is wholly insufficient to support the finding that appellant was not qualified to do business in this state at the time of the commencement of the action, and if the judgment did not rest upon any other foundation, it should be reversed. To the foreclosure complaint, respondents in effect pleaded want of consideration for the notes and mortgages given, and further that their execution was procured by fraud on the part of the seller and appellant, and ashed for their cancelation.
It appears that the Emerson-Brantingham Implement Company owned this second-hand threshing outfit, which at the beginning of the negotiations was at St. Anthony, in Fremont County. Acting through appellant company, it induced respondent C. B. Wade to go from Ms home in Power county to St. Anthony to look at the machinery in question, which was represented to have been recently repaired and put in good condition. It had been repainted, and externally presented the appearance of being practically as good as new. At this time respondent had neither time nor opportunity to give it more than a casual examination, and no test of the working qualities of this machinery was or could then be made.
The agreement required the vendor to ship the machinery to Pocatello, where the buyer was to receive the same. Upon its arrival, a controversy arose with regard to its purchase price. Appellant’s agent claimed that the company had refused to accept the order given by respondent for the machinery prior to its shipment, for the reason that at the time of fixing the price, an expense of $800 which the seller had been to in repairing the machinery had been overlooked. It is therefore evident that the shipping order signed by respondent, not having been accepted by the seller, was not effective to bind either party at this time. In the course of the subsequent negotiations wMch followed, including the unloading of the machinery and probablj- the execution of the notes, and mortgages in question, although the time of
During the trial, respondents were permitted to amend their answer by alleging that prior to the execution of the order and the notes and mortgages sued upon, the Emerson-Brantingham Implement Company, by and through their selling agent, appellant here, for the purpose of inducing respondents to execute the order and notes and mortgages in payment for this machinery, represented to them that this second-hand threshing outfit had been thoroughly rebuilt at the factory, and was in first-class operating condition, which representation was false; but that respondents relied upon such representation, having made no examination of it because of it being so covered up when inspected by Wade at St. Anthony that no examination could be made at that time; that at the time of its delivery, it was not in condition to operate, but upon the representation of the seller and its agent that they would place this machinery in good condition, respondents, relying upon such representation, were induced to execute the order and receipt mentioned, and by respondents’ acceptance it was intended by both parties to the agreement that such acceptance was being made upon the condition that the machinery would be put in good condition, which was not done.
At the time this amendment was presented and allowed, counsel for appellant, in resisting the same, read into the record the affidavit of the selling agent, one Musselman, who appears to have had entire charge of the negotiations for
But appellant relies upon the terms of the written order previously given, and of the receipt, which refers to it, that was signed by Wade on the 5th of November following. This latter instrument acknowledges receipt of the machinery “in accordance with the order of October 10th,” and further provides that the machinery is received by respondents under and pursuant to the terms and conditions of the order and not otherwise, and that such order contains all of the agreement between the parties.
However, it is clear from the testimony of all of the parties to this transaction, including that of the sales agent Musselman, that this receipt was signed before the machinery was unloaded, and before it was in any manner received by respondent, upon the representation to him that it was the practice of the company to require the signing of a receipt before the machinery was unloaded at the shipping station. After the same was unloaded, the selling agent Musselman, with an engineer, attempted, in conjunction with respondent, to take the machinery about eighteen miles overland to respondents’ farm. It was learned on going a few miles out of Pocatello that the main countershaft bearing cap bolts had not been properly repaired, but were held in place with pieces of tin, and they
“Fraud may be predicated upon the nonperformance of a promise in certain cases, where the promise is the device to accomplish the fraud.” (Pocatello Security Trust Co. v. Henry, 35 Ida. 321, 206 Pac. 175; 12 R. C. L. 257, sec. 23; Adams v. Schiffer, 11 Colo. 15, 7 Am. St. 202, 17 Pac. 21; Sweet v. Kimball, 166 Mass. 332, 55 Am. St. 406, 44 N. E. 243; Cerny v. Paxton & Gallagher Co., 78 Neb. 134, 110 N. W. 882, 10 L. R. A., N. S., 640, and note; Metcalf v. Hart, 3 Wyo. 513, 31 Am. St. 122, 27 Pac. 900, 31 Pac. 407.)
We think the facts of this case bring the alleged fraudulent transaction within the rule announced in Pocatello Security Trust Co. v. Henry, supra, for the reason that the representations with regard to the complete repair of this machinery and the. representation that it was in good working order, while in part made prior to the signing of the order and also' prior to the signing of the receipt for this, machinery at about the time the same was unloaded in the yards at Pocatello, the subsequent actions of the vendor’s agent in accompanying respondent overland with the machinery some eighteen miles to his farm, and the defects being discovered in the course of the two days following, which the selling agent and engineer who were present attempted to repair, all tend to show that neither the vendor nor respondents intended that this sale contract should be closed at the time of the execution of this order and receipt, nor at the time of the execution of the notes and mortgages, which appear to have been executed prior to the execution of the receipt.
When this transaction is considered as an entirety, it is clear that the selling agent Musselman, who appears to have
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to respondents.