Morrison v. . Hartley

101 S.E. 375 | N.C. | 1919

The plaintiff sues to recover damages for fraud in the sale of real estate (160 acres) in Oklahoma, basing the action on alleged false representations of defendant vendor, that it was worth $200 per acre, their purpose being investment and speculation.

In the summer of 1909, the plaintiff, the defendant, and W. L. Hartley, a brother of defendant, all residents of North Carolina, went to Oklahoma and purchased 160 acres of land near the town of Britton, for $16,000. In a few days after the purchase of this land, they declined an offer of $20,000 for it. They returned home, and in November, 1909, W. L. Hartley, who had other holdings in Oklahoma, removed from North Carolina, and became a resident of that State. In December, 1909, W. L. Hartley, listed their said 160-acre tract with Charles Phelps, a real estate dealer, at the price of $25,000, and on 10 January, 1910, said broker secured (619) a purchaser, in the person of H.C. Finley, at the price of $25,000. Morrison and R. B. Hartley, at the instance of Morrison, declined to make a deed, and Phelps sued the three joint owners for commissions. The defendants in that action prevailed, not on the ground that a sale had not been effected, but on the ground that the contract with Phelps was conditioned upon the defendants being able, through the plaintiff, to secure certain other lands at a given price, and that said condition had not been, or could not be, complied with.

In March, 1910, the Hartleys sold their two-thirds undivided interest in the land to Morrison, on the basis of $25,000 for the entire property. Land values in that section declined very materially, and, seven years after his purchase from the Hartleys, he claims to have discovered that in that transaction a fraud had been perpetrated upon him. He made the discovery through W. L. Hartley, who, it appears, gave the information on account of a serious disagreement with his brother, the defendant.

The evidence of the plaintiff tends to prove that the fraud was perpetrated in March, 1910; that the defendant and his brother, W. L. Hartley, were in Oklahoma the first of the month and discovered that there was a great shrinkage in land values, and that the land in which they were jointly interested with the plaintiff was not *665 worth more than $20 or $40 an acre; that they conceived the plan of selling to the plaintiff, who was in North Carolina; that they telegraphed the plaintiff that W. L. Hartley was about to sell his interest to one Finley on the basis of $25,000 for the whole land, and that it was worth $200 per acre; that the defendant returned to North Carolina and repeated his representations to the plaintiff; that relying on these representations, which were false, the plaintiff bought, and that he did not discover the fraud until 1917, when W. L. Hartley, upon disagreement with his brother, the defendant, told him of it. Also, that the defendant and his brother tried to prevent the plaintiff from discovering the fraud.

The evidence of the defendant was in direct contradiction of that for the plaintiff.

The jury returned the following verdict:

"1. Did the defendant falsely and deceitfully represent to the plaintiff that the market value of the land mentioned in the complaint was worth greatly in excess of its actual market value, and that W. L. Hartley was about to sell his interest therein to an outside party, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: `Yes.'

"2. Did the plaintiff rely thereon, and was he thereby induced to purchase a further interest in said land to his injury? Answer: `Yes.'

"3. What damage is plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant? Answer: `$3,000.'

"4. Did plaintiff pay out moneys for interest and taxes for the use and benefit of the defendant, as alleged in the (620) complaint? Answer: `Yes.'

"5. If so, what is the amount of such interest and taxes? Answer: `$1,160.'

"6. Is the plaintiff's action barred by the statute of limitations, as alleged in the answer? Answer: `No.'

Judgment on the verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed. There are twenty-three exceptions in the record, sixteen to the admission or exclusion of evidence, one to the refusal to nonsuit, two to instructions on the issue of damages, three to instructions on the issue of the statute of limitations, and one to the signing of the judgment.

None of these require extended discussion, because the real *666 controversy was one of fact, and most of the exceptions were taken as matter of precaution during the progress of the trial.

Those principally relied on are to permitting the contents of a telegram, purporting to have been sent by the defendant to the plaintiff in 1910, from Oklahoma to induce the plaintiff to buy, to be proven by parol, another to allowing the plaintiff to introduce a copy of a letter written by the defendant to his brother in 1916, and to the refusal to enter judgment of nonsuit.

The telegram was material to the inquiry, and the loss of the original was shown. The plaintiff testified he received the telegram, and afterwards gave it to the defendant, who said he wanted it "about dates" in a controversy with his brother, and the defendant, upon notice, failed to produce it, and it was also shown that the record in the telegraph office had been destroyed.

This was sufficient foundation for admitting parol evidence.

The loss of the letter, a copy of which was introduced, was not established, but the letter was not directly in issue, and it was not the purpose of the action to enforce any obligation created by it, and, "The rule excluding parol evidence as to the contents of a written instrument applies only in actions between parties to the writing, when the enforcement of any obligation created by it is substantially the cause of action." Holloman v. R. R., 172 N.C. 375. See, also, Faulcon v. Johnson,102 N.C. 268; Carrington v. Allen, 87 N.C. 354; Ledford v. Emerson,138 N.C. 502.

The motion to nonsuit could not have been allowed, because (621) evidence was introduced tending to prove a false representation as to the value of the land, made with the knowledge that it was untrue and with intent to deceive, relied on by the plaintiff to his damage, and it was for the jury and not for us to say whether it was worthy of belief.

His Honor instructed the jury that the measure of damages was the difference between the real value of the land and its value as it was represented to be, and that the action was barred if more than three years elapsed before the bringing of the action after the discovery of the fraud by the plaintiff, acting as a prudent man, which is in accord with our precedents.

The verdict might well have been in favor of the defendant, as the plaintiff had to rely on the evidence of W. L. Hartley, who admitted that he conspired with the defendant, his brother, to defraud the plaintiff, and who made no disclosure until he and his brother disagreed, but these were matters for the consideration of the jury, and on the exceptions there is no error which authorizes us to order a new trial.

No error. *667 Cited: Mills v. Walker, 179 N.C. 484; Buchan v. King, 182 N.C. 173;Rhodes v. Tanner, 197 N.C. 463; Kennedy v. Trust Co., 213 N.C. 623;Rivenbark v. Oil Corp., 216 N.C. 599; Horne v. Cloninger, 256 N.C. 104.

midpage