27 Ind. 27 | Ind. | 1866
J.—The appellant, as administrator, sued the appellees on a promissory note executed by them, and payable to him, for $2,101 14. The defense was, that the consideration of the note was, in part, a quantity of wheat, purchased at a public auction of the intestate’s effects, held by the plaintiff; that the wheat was not present, or subject to examination, but was stored in a warehouse six miles distant, or in transit to Toledo, and that the plaintiff, to induce the defendants to make the purchase, falsely and fraudulently represented that the wheat was “ only a little damp,” and otherwise in good condition, when, in truth, it was spoiled, sour, and worthless. Reply, general denial. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $928. A motion by the plain
The evidence shows that the wheat was stored as stated in the answer; that when the wheat was being sold, at the close of the second day of sale, the warehouse receipt was produced and read, describing the wheat as being in “ bad order;” that the defendants, who were bidding, and attended the sale for the purpose of buying the wheat, called upon the administrator to state the condition of the wheat, and he responded that it wasonly a little damp.” On the faith of this statement, the defendants became the purchasers, at $1 86 pper bushel, that being from eight to sixteen cents above the market price for good wheat. The wheat in transit was 150 bushels, sold in Toledo, and netted forty cents per bushel. The balance was shipped eastward as soon as practicable, which was soon after the opening of navigation on the Wabash and Erie canal, in the spring of 1865, and sold in New York in September, netting thirty-five and one-half cents p.er bushel. The purchase was in December, 1864. The warehouseman, knowing fully the condition of the wheat, bid §1 25 per bushel, and testified that he believed he would not have suffered loss in purchasing it at that price. It was very wet.
The-appellant insists that the evidence developed a case in which the rule caveat emptor applies. We do not think so. The absence of the property from the place of sale was unknown to the purchaser until it was put up, at auction. It was then impossible to examine it before bidding. He had no previous reason to suppose that it was distant six miles; ho was ignorant of its condition. He had a right, therefore' to rely, as he did, upon the statements of the seller. The slightest sense of common justice would be shocked at the application of this maxim to such a case. 1 Parsons on Con'., 5th ed., 588.
But it is urged that, in any event, the judgment was for too Small a sum, the amount recovered showing that the
The defense pleaded, was a failure of consideration, resulting from a breach of a covenant of warranty. The measure of damages in such case is the difference between the actual value of the property at the date of the purchase, and its value at that date if it had answered the terms of the warranty. If the property be put upon a fair market, and sold to the best advantage, within a reasonable time, the price realized is undoubtedly prima fade evidence 'of its value, and the price paid is also such evidence of the value of such an article as. would have fulfilled the terms of the warranty. But in this case it is not contended that the whole evidence would justify a finding that either the price paid or the price realized was in fact tire value, in the one case, of the wheat as it was at the time of purchasé, or, in the other, as -it would have been if according to the warranty. But the finding can be justified upon no other basis than that these prices were actually the value of the property in the two specified conditions. It is, therefore, for a sum greatly too small, and a new trial should have been granted.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial.