51 W. Va. 624 | W. Va. | 1902
In June, 1896, Samuel Newberger and Dora Newberger filed their bill in equity in the circuit court of Wood County against Charles E. Wells and D. H. Leonard, trustee. They allege that prior to June 1, 1876, Samuel Newberger was engaged in the mercantile business at Parkersburg and was the owner of a large stock of merchandise and a large and valuable tract of land, situated on Fishing Creek in Wetzel County, containing
As exhibits, there were filed with the bill a deed from Edward Braiden and wife to Samuel Newberger, a deed from P. L. Gambrill and wife to Edward Braiden, a deed from Isaac Hoge and others to Gambrill, a deed of trust from Samuel Newberger to D. H. Leonard, trustee, the agreement between Newberger and wife and Charles E. Wells, the deed from Leonard, special commissioner, to Wells, the deed from Newberger and wife to Wells, the agreement between Wells and others and the South Penn Oil Company, and a copy of the order in the ejectment suit, in which judgment is confessed by Smith and others in favor of Wells and others.
Wells filed his separate demurrer to the bill, and the complainants so amended their bill, with leave of the court, as to show that the contract was made in the city of Parkersburg and that the plaintiffs and the defendant, Leonard, resided there. The defendants then demurred to the amended bill and the plaintiffs joined in the demurrer, and on December 1, 1900, the court sustained the demurrer, and the plaintiffs not desiring to amend their bill, it was dismissed and the cause is now in thi; Court on appeal.
The prayer of the bill is: “That the defendants^, named as such in the caption of this bill, may be made defendants hereto and required to answer the same and each and every allegation there
The contract of July 6, 1887, giving Wells an option to purchase the lands in question, and which he afterwards accepted and acted upon, is perfectly clear in its terms and provisions, but the complainants found their bill upon the contention that Wells has not fully executed it upon his part and that his failure to execute it and the failure of complainants to require full payment of the purchase money, are due to the fraudulent conduct of Wells in representing to complainants that the quantity of land was only two thousand and twenty acres, when, in fact, it is three thousand eight hundred acres.' Whether the contract required Wells to make the survey or not, the bill alleges that he did undertake and cause the survey to be made and made a false representation as to the result of that survey. ■ If it was his duty, under the contract, to make the survey, his false representation, after making it and informing himself and agreeing in his contract to ascertain the true quantity, was fraudulent;'. If the contract did not require him to make the survey, and he did it voluntarily and misrepresented the quantity of land, such conduct was not only fraudulent, but embodied a higher degree of fraud. It was more active, officious and affirmative in its character than in the other case.
The difficulty in this case, on the question of demurrer, .docs not lie in the sufficiency of the allegation of fraud and mistake. The real trouble is encountered in determining whether the plaintiffs have resorted, to the proper remedy and havr-' brought their suit in time. The plaintiffs have made their deed, conveying the land to the defendant, and he has accepted it. The contract of July 6, 1887, has been fully executed, completed and performed, except that all the purchase money has not been paid, according to the theory of this bill. Under such
This lien for purchase money would not exist in this State unless reserved in the deed. Section 1 of chapter 75 of our Code provides that, “If any person convey any real estate and the purchase money or any part thereof, remain unpaid at the time of the conveyance, he shall not thereby have a lien for such unpaid purchase money, unless such lien is expressly reserved on the face of the conveyance.” If a lien did exist, that would give equitable jurisdiction to.enforce, against the land, the payment of the purchase money remaining unpaid. Such ground of equitable jurisdiction does not exist in this case. No lien- for the purchase money is reserved in the deed. Then again we are confronted with the principles, announced by this Court in Burbridge v. Sadler, 46 W. Va. 39, that'“A claim for compensation for deficiency in quantity of land conveyed by the deed, where the purchase money has been paid is a mere demand not cognizable only in equity but at law, and is subject to the statute
This Court has announced the existence of an equitable jurisdiction very similar, if not like that claimed in the plaintiffs’ bill, in many cases. In Kelly v. Riley, 22 W. Va. 247, it is held that, “A court of equity has jurisdiction to decree compensation for a deficiency in the quantity of land sold, although the land has been conveyed by a deed with general warranty, and the purchase money has all been paid;” and, further, that “Where by reason of the fraud of the vendor in misrepresenting the quantity of land sold, the vendee is entitled to compensation, or abatement from the purchase money, on account of deficiency in the quantity of land, courts of equity and courts of common law, have concurrent jurisdiction to grant relief.” It was held in Atkinson v. Beckett, 34 W. Va. 584, that, in case of an ex
In those states, in which the implied lien for purchase money of land exists, this bill w'ould no doubt be good as a bill for the specific execution of the contract of July 6, 1887, and that contract being under seal, the statute of limitations would not apply, because the bill was filed within ten years from thq date of the contract. Nor would the court, in such state, dismiss the-claim as stale on the ground of laches. While the purchaser has accepted the deed, that is a circumstance which only strengthens the case made by the plaintiffs’ bill. If he had refused to accept the deed and to pay the purchase money, all a court of equity could do would be to compel him to pay the purchase money, and all the plaintiffs would be required to do, in order to obtain the aid of such court, would be to tender a sufficient deed, and the purpose of the proceeding, in such ease, would be such as is sought in this bill, merely a recovery of money. But, as no such lien exists here, the bill is not sustainable on the theory of an implied lien for purchase money.
The following considerations conclusively show that this Court has been right in grounding equitable jurisdiction in cases of this kind upon mistake and fraud. Except for the mistake or the fraud of the defendant, these complainants, if their
The grave question in this case is, whether this suit was brought in time. The demand of the plaintiffs is not purely an” equitable one, nor is it purely legal in its nature. This sufficiently appears from what has already been shown. It is a matter of concurrent jurisdiction, and, therefore, the question of laches, raised on the demurrer, is exceedingly interesting and intricate, as well as difficult in its solution. In such case, ought the general principle of equity, that there can be no fixed and determined rule as to what will constitute laches, to be applied ? Should cases of this kind be determined, as regards laches, by their own peculiar circumstances, in the sound discretion of the court, in each case, or should a court of equity, by analogy, apply the statute of limitations? Where the demand is purely equitable, courts of equity determine the question of laches upon rules and principles of their own, and may hold that the plaintiff is precluded by his laches, without regard to whether the period of delay is longer or shorter than that prescribed by the statute. Hogg’s Eq. Pr. 415, and cases there cited. This Court decided in Thompson v. Whittaker Iron Co., 41 W. Va. 574, that “Where a cause of action arises out of a fraud, the statute of limitations runs from its perpetration.” Speaking of the demand in that case, which was held not to be of equitable cognizance, Judge BRANNON said: “But if it could be regarded a trust, it is not cognizable only in equitv, but is such a question as admits of legal remedy; and the statute of limitations applies to a trust, unless it be one only in equity
In Wear v. Skinner, 46 Md. 257, under a statute somewhat different from ours, but no doubt intended for the same pur
In Bailey v. Glover, cited, Mr. Justice Miller, delivering the opinion of the'court, said: “We. also think that in suits in equity the decided weight of authority is in favor of the proposition that where the party injured by the fraud remains in ignorance of it without any fault or want of diligence or care on his part the bar of the statute does not begin to run until the fraud is discovered, though there be no special circumstances or efforts on the part of the party committing the fraud to conceal it from the knowledge of the other party.” In Quimby v. Blackey, 63 N. H. 77, an action of assumpsit, it was held that the fraud by which a cause of action is concealed need not be other than that which caused the original injury, in order to prevent the operation of the statute of limitations. Smith, Judge, said: “The defendant’s neglect to give information to the plaintiff in December, 1871, of the finding of his money and
These cases seem to establish the principle laid down in 19 m. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2d Ed. 242, and this case undoubtedly ills within that principle. The cause of action set up in the laintiffs’ bill is based mainly upon the alleged fraud of the .'fendant. That fraud, if any, was an affirmative, possitive rt, apparently designed and intended, and certainly well cal-ilated, to prevent an investigation on the part of the plaintiffs 3 to the quantity of land. It not only induced them to make íe deed.in consideration of less money than the defendants had greed to pay them, but it had the further effect of lulling them 3 sleep, giving them an assurance that there was not over two liousand and twenty acres of land and blinding them to their etriment and injury. The misrepresentation just as clearly nd effectually obstructed the prosecution of the cause of action fter that cause of action had been created as it produced the ight of action itself. It was not only a misrepresentation as to he quantity of land but that representation purported to be the esult of a survey. The falsity of it could not be known to the ilaintiffs. Kothing short of another survey, at considerable ex-)ense, would have revealed the fraud. The sale having been nmpleted, the deed made, and Wells put into possession of the and, the plaintiffs had no right to go upon it and survey it vithout his permission. True it is, that out of mere suspicion, 'ear or curiosity, they might have questioned the truth of the statement and the bona fides of Wells’ conduct, but that' is all ■hey could have stood upon in bringing a suit against him Before they made the discovery. But it is useless to pursue speculations as to what the plaintiffs might have done. It is enough that they had the right to rely upon the defendant’s representation' until they discovered that it was false. Tie had thrown them off their guard in the most formal and effectual manner. “There is also a wide distinction between a ease where the action is predicated upon the fraud of a party in the sale of property, or where he has fraudulently thrown a person off his guard, has prevented such an investigation as would have revealed the truth, and one which is predicated upon a breach of contract of warranty, however false the warranty may be. In the former
But, to avoid the statute of limitations in such case as this, the bill must allege that the cause of action was fraudulently concealed, .or that the prosecution of it, in.the language of the statute, has been obstructed, specifying the means of obstruction, which, in this instance, could be nothing other than fraudulent concealment of its existence. Had the plaintiffs amended their bill in this respect, it might, under the principles adverted to, be good, but they fáiled to do so. Laches is apparent on the face of the bill and no sufficient excuse for the delay appears. It is clearly not enough that they failed to discover the mistake or fraud. They must allege that by some act or conduct of the defendant they were prevented from so doing, or the prosecution of their right was obstructed, and the want of such allegation is cause of demurrer. Vanbibber v. Beirne, 6 W. Va. 168; Jackson’s Adm’r v. Hull, 21 W. Va. 610; Paxton v. Paxton, 38 W. Va. 616; Whittaker v. Improvement Co., 34 W. Va. 217; Van Winkle v. Blackford, 33 W. Va. 584; 1 Bar. Chy. Pr. 84; Story’s Eq. Pl., s. 484, and notes; 12 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 832. That the nature of the matter to be set up in the bill in avoidance of laches is such as is above indicated is shown by the book last above cited at pages 834, 835, 836 and 837. "Where ignorance of rights or wrongs is relied on to account for laches, this fact must be plainly alleged in the bill. The plaintiff must also allege why he was so long in ignorance and the means used to keep him so. * * * The foregoing rules are peculiarly applicable to cases where excuse for laches may be founded upon fraud, mistake, concealment, or misrepresentation, and in such case it is necessary to allege these facts in avoidance in the bill. The particular acts of fraud or concealment should be set forth by specific and distinct averments, and it will not be sufficient to allege their occurrence in a general or vague way.” Id. 836-7. Where the statute is 'applied by anology, the excuse made in the bill must be of the same nature and be set up with the same particularity as in a replication to a pica of the statute of limitations.
Thus, treating the bill as one sufficiently charging fraud, it is insufficient for want of allegations excusing laches or taking the case out of the statute of limitations. But is fraud suf
For the foregoing reasons, the decree complained of must be affirmed.
Affirmed.