57 Minn. 206 | Minn. | 1894
Lead Opinion
There was no evidence that would justify a finding of a .contract between the parties subsequent to the written contract. It could not be claimed that, with Exhibit D in force,
On that point we do not think there was evidence sufficient to make it a question for the jury. There is nothing on the point but the testimony of plaintiff, and, to state that most strongly in his favor, there had been a prior oral agreement for a warranty more favorable to him than that in Exhibt D. That exhibit was made up by filling with a pen blanks in a printed form containing the order for the machine and the warranty, the latter being in somewhat smaller type than the former, though not so small as to be difficult to read, and it was the last thing before, and immediately over, the place for the plaintiff’s signature. After it was filled up, plaintiff went into the office of defendant’s agent to sign it. It was getting to be dark, and there was no lamp lighted, though he does not state the hour. Another witness says 5 o’clock, October 11th. Plaintiff picked up the paper, and held it in his hands as though reading it, when one Ramage, who appears to have been a clerk of defendant’s agent, said to him that it was only the order for the machine; when plaintiff, without reading it, laid it down on the table, and signed it.
To make out a case of fraud, it must appear that Ramage said to plaintiff that the paper was only the order for the machine, with the fraudulent intent to induce him to sign the paper without knowing its contents. Under the circumstances, a jury would not be justified in concluding there was such fraudulent intent. The paper was just what Ramage said, — an order for the machine, containing conditions upon which it was to be delivered and received. If, as said in McCall v. Bushnell, 41 Minn. 37, (42 N. W. 545,) “the instrument itself, knowingly executed, becomes a strong ‘wall of evidence,’ not to be lightly overcome by unsatisfactory oral testimony,” a verdict against the instrument on such evidence as the foregoing cannot be sustained.
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent from the foregoing opinion, and am of the opinion that there is sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict. Plaintiff purchased from defendant a threshing machine and engine. His testimony is that the contract was oral, and included a warranty and a right to return the machine if it failed to do good work; and, after notice, the defendant failed to make it do good work. He mortgaged other personal property as security for the purchase price. He and the defendant both failed to make the machine do good work, and he returned it. The defendant then took possession of the mortgaged property under the mortgage, and plaintiff brought replevin.
Upon the trial defendant produced a written order for the machine, following which, on the same paper, and printed in small type, is a contract of purchase of the machine, reciting the warranty the purchaser received with it, which is wholly different from the oral warranty which he claims, and contains no clause giving him the right, after trial, to return the machine.
In impeachment of this instrument, plaintiff testified that in the office of the agent, late one evening, the clerk of the agent filled out a paper; that it was quite dark; there was no light in the room, and he could not see to read when the paper was given him. That he took up the paper to read it, and the clerk told him it was nothing but an order for the machine. Again, he says: “He seemed to be in a hurry, and he spoke; he said it was about time to go home, and he says, ‘It is nothing but an order for the machine.’ ” “I had it only while it was lying on the desk. I picked it up in my hand, and he told me what it was, and I just put it down and signed it. I could hardly see to write in there. Q. Why didn’t you read it? A. Because it was quite late in the evening, and Ramage said what it was.”
The witness also testified that some time after he signed this order, and when the machine arrived, in a conversation with the agent “I asked him for a warranty, and they told me they would send me one; when they sent-these papers to Fulda, they would send one with it in the letter.” “I asked him for a warranty, and he said that they had no printed one, but would send me one in .e letter, and the warranty was to be the same as he had stated
It seems to me the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury to-impeach the written instrument for fraud. When the parties standi on an equal footing, and the party claiming fraud is able to read, and no artifice is used to prevent him from reading the instrument he* is about to sign, his own negligence in failing to read it is the substantial cause of his injury. But each case must stand on its own-peculiar circumstances where there are such circumstances in the case. Where some artifice is fraudulently used to prevent his reading the instrument, and there is also a difficulty in the way of hi» reading it, as that it is too dark to see to read it at the time and. place, and the objectionable matter is in fine print, and, as in this; case, where he alone was to sign the instrument, and this objectionable matter was a provision which he might naturally expect, should be signed by the opposite party, and not by him, it seems; to me that his negligence and defendant’s fraud were both questions for the jury.
Fraud must be proved by circumstantial evidence. The fraudulent intent is usually a mere inference. It is a question for the jury whether the clerk, Bamage, said what he did when plaintiff picked up the instrument to read it, for the fraudulent purpose of preventing him from reading it, and whether Bamage took advantage of the darkness and the fine print to aid him in accomplishing his purpose, and also took advantage of the fact that plaintiff might naturally suppose that the warranty from the defendant to. him should be signed by the defendant, and not by him. While the-evidence is certainly not very strong' as a question of law, it insufficient to sustain the verdict. In my opinion, the order appealed, from should be affirmed.
(Opinion published 58 N. W. 865.)