84 F. 131 | 8th Cir. | 1897
On June 13, 1895, the Missouri Savings & Loan Company, the plaintiff in error, commenced an action in the court below against Oscar Rice, B. Hudson, A. Graff, and A. M. Keene, the defendants in error. The case was heard and decided upon a demurrer to an amended petition or declaration, which states as its only ground that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The circuit court sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the action. This writ of error challenges that decision.
There is nothing in the record to inform us upon what ground the court below based its action, but counsel for the defendants in error cites paragraph 4095, Gen. St. Kan. 1889, which provides that actions for “relief on the ground of fraud” can only be brought within two years after the cause of action accrued; and while he admits that, if this is an action on contract, it was brought in time, he argues that the petition shows that this action was for relief on the ground of fraud, and that the causes of action which it pleads accrued, more than two years before the action was commenced. The question presented, then, is whether this is an action ex contractu or ex delicto, and that question must be answered by the amended petition.
This petition pleads two similar causes of action, which differ merely in the amounts in question, the names of the mortgagors, and the description of the mortgaged property. The material facts stated as the basis of the first cause of action are these; The plaintiff is a corporation of the state of Missouri, engaged in loaning money on real estate security to its stockholders, to be repaid in monthly installments. Its principal place of business is St. Louis. Whenever it loans money in any other city, it requires its stockholders in that city to elect a local board of directors, and requires that board to recommend each applicant for a loan as worthy of credit, and to appraise the real estate which he offers as security. The rules of the plaintiff provided that loans upon real estate security should not exceed 50 per cent, of the cash value of the real estate, and the plaintiff loaned an amount equal to only 50 per cent, of the appraised value of the security, and loaned that only upon a recommendation and appraisement made by its local board. The defend
This petition contains no allegation that the defendants intended to deceive or defraud the plaintiff, or to the effect that they conspired with Player or with each other for that purpose. Its legal effect is that, in consideration of the charter which they received from the plaintiff and the powers thereby granted to them, the de
The effect of the Kansas statute of limitations against an action for relief on the ground of fraud is nowhere more tersely and correctly stated than by Judge Carver in Brown v. Bank, 2 Kan. App. 352, 354, 42 Pac. 593, where he says:
“This limitation applies in express terms to ‘an action for relief on the ground of fraud.’ This cannot be held to apply to every case wherein a fraudulent transaction may be, either directly or incidentally, inquired into. • It must be a case where the party against whom the statute is urged as a bar is seeking relief to which he claims himself entitled because of the fraud of the opposite party. In other words, the fraud must be a part of the substantive cause of action on which the right to relief is founded, and without which no cause of action exists. Jackson v. Plyler, 38 S. C. 496, 17 S. E. 255; Vanduyn v. Hepner, 45 Ind. 589; Detwiler v. Schultheis, 122 Ind. 155, 23 N. E. 709.”
This is not such, a case, and tbe judgment below must be reversed. A careful examination of tbe petition, however, discloses no cause of action upon tbe contract against tbe defendant Rice. Tbe allegations of tbe petition are that tbe other defendants appraised tbe security at much more than its value, and from that appraisal the loss resulted. It contains no allegation that Rice took any part in tbe appraisal, or that be did any other act in violation of bis agreement which resulted in any injury to tbe plaintiff. The demurrer of Rice should accordingly be sustained, and tbe case, as against him, should be dismissed, while tbe demurrers of tbe other defendants should be overruled, with leave to answer. Let tbe judgment below be reversed, with costs against tbe defendants in error Hudson, Graff, and Keene, and let tbe case be remanded to the court below for further proceedings not inconsistent with tbe views expressed in this opinion.