126 A. 332 | Conn. | 1924
The defendant, through a broker, sold a lot of land in Hartford with a brick building thereon containing three tenements, to the plaintiff. The broker acting within his authority as agent for the defendant, represented to the plaintiff that each of the three tenements rented for $35, making a total monthly rental of $105, and relying upon such representation the plaintiff entered into a contract for the purchase of these premises and subsequently did purchase them.
The representation was false and fraudulent; the rental paid for each tenement both at the time of the contract of sale and of the sale, was $25 a month. The fair rental value of each tenement at these times was *429 $30. The finding of this rental as "$25 or $30" must be taken as a finding of $30.
The fair market value of the property at the time of sale was $13,500, which was the purchase price paid by the defendant. By the expenditure of $325.50 in the permanent improvement of electric wiring and fixtures, the plaintiff was enabled to obtain the rental for each tenement which he relied upon obtaining when he purchased the premises, viz., $35 a month; and with the installation of electric wiring and fixtures, the rental value of each tenement was then $35 a month.
The plaintiff contended in the trial court, and now contends, that the measure of his damages should be the difference between the actual value at the time of sale, and its value if it had been as represented, and that the computation of the damages should be obtained by capitalizing the amount of the fraudulently represented rentals, viz: $360, at 10%, and adding this sum, $3,600, to the actual value, $13,500, in order to obtain the value as it would have been if as represented, viz, $17,100. The trial court ruled that the measure of damages was "the difference between the actual value of the property at the time of the purchase, and its value if the property had been what it was represented and warranted to be"; and that since the installation of electric wires and fixtures at a cost of $325.50 would give the plaintiff exactly the rental the property as represented should have brought, this sum would give the plaintiff this difference in value and more accurately measure the damage than by an attempt to find the true value from the estimates made by the real-estate experts. And further, that the method of obtaining the measure of damages by the plaintiff unduly penalized the defendants and disregarded many elements which must be considered under our rule.
The measure of damages in cases of fraudulent *430
representation where the subject of the transfer has been retained — applied in Murray v. Jennings,
We find no basis in the record for the claimed corrections in the finding.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.