37 Mich. 415 | Mich. | 1877
The special count on which a recovery was had in this cause was as follows: The plaintiff complains “for that whereas, heretofore, to-wit, on or about the 1st day of May, A. D. 1872, the said defendant being then engaged in the business of selling the descriptions of wild land, which were subject to private entry and .sale by the
“And the said plaintiff thereupon informed said defendant that if he purchased of him the said minutes and descriptions of land, it was for the purpose of purchasing the lands themselves of the United States and of the State of Michigan, according as he might ascertain which of said governments owned the same, and by reason of their value on account of the timber growing thereon that would make such land valuable and profitable for lumbering purposes, and by reason of their value for farming purposes after all the timber fit for good lumber has been cut off of the same, and having never seen said lands, or any of the same, he should rely upon the promises and upon the representations and undertakings of the said defendant concerning the same hereinbefore set forth. And the said defendant so being informed by the said plaintiff, did at Ionia aforesaid, on or about the 1st day of May aforesaid, sell the said plaintiff each and every of the said descriptions of land for the purposes aforesaid, and at the special instances and request
“And the said plaintiff further avers that afterwards, to-wit: on or about the 9th day of May, 1873, and relying upon the said promises and undertakings of the said defendant, he, the said plaintiff, at great expense, purchased [the said lands of the United States and of the State of Michigan, paying therefor sums of money which are specified; that he has ever since been owner thereof and paid out large sums in taxes and] in ascertaining in fact the quality and quantity of said lands, and of each and every parcel thereof, and the quality and value of the timber growing thereon. And although he in all respects kept and performed his agreements with said defendant, and paid him the said sum of nine hundred and fifty dollars for the said minutes and descriptions of land, yet the said plaintiff in fact alleges that the said lands were not of the quality, and did not then have growing thereon, nor on any of the said descriptions thereof, pine trees or hemlock, either of the quantity or quality so promised and represented by the said defendant to the said plaintiff as hereinbefore set forth, but on the contrary thereof the said land had no such timber growing thereon and was not of the quality so promised by the said defendant, and was of no value whatever either for farming purposes, or for any of the purposes for which the said plaintiff purchased the said minutes of said defendant, and said lands aforesaid whereby said plaintiff hath suffered great damages, to-wit: the sum of six thousand dollars.”
The theory of this count, as we understand it, is that Page, having special knowledge regarding certain parcels of government lands which would be valuable to persons contemplating the purchase thereof, was engaged in the business of selling descriptions thereof, as one might sell a valuable secret as property, and that in the course of that business he sold to the plaintiff his knowledge of the several parcels of land which the plaintiff subsequently purchased, giving a particular description of the important features of each parcel, and warranting his description to be correct. It is
The plaintiff was a witness on his own behalf, and testified as follows:
“Page, the defendant, has been engaged in land-looking for some 20 years past, and has been in the habit of looking up pine lands and furnishing ‘minutes’ thereof. Witness had conversation with Page some time in the winter of 1872. “I told him when he went into the woods again I wanted him to look me up some good pine lands, and I would pay him for it. He always said: ‘Why, Judge, I know just what you want, and I can give you what you want.’ Had several conversations about it. He said he would give me first refusal of minutes of good pine lands. Sometime in the spring he went into the woods; and shortly after that he wrote or telegraphed me that he had some ‘minutes.’ No particular price was agreed upon for the minutes. I was to pay what the minutes were worth after he returned from the woods. The land he gave me minutes of and which I bought are in Mason county, towns 19 N., 17 and 18 W., this State. I told Page I thought it strange that Mears and others hadn’t taken these lands. Page said purchasers sometimes go around good pieces of pine land. After Page came back to Ionia I told him I wanted the estimates of the land, and Page read them from his minutes; he said they were minutes of good pine land, and I set down on each description of land the quality and quantity of pine and other timber, and of the kind of soil. [Witness here produced a paper, and said] I hold in my hand the minutes of each description as noted down by me and signed by the defendant. [This paper was marked Exhibit A.] Page went into the woods and the understanding was that he would give me some minutes of good pine lands. I received a letter or telegram telling me to locate the lands described in ‘Exhibit A.’ I did so. I located all these lands under this arrangement. After I located the lands I had him make these minutes (Ex. A). I bought the lands on the strength of his agreement to furnish me with descriptions of good pine lands, that he would give me minutes of good pine land.”
Cross-examination: “In 1872 I told Page to look up some good pine lands for me, and he told me he could give me just what I wanted. While he was in the woods he wrote or telegraphed me giving me the descriptions, and I went and located the lands. The minutes were made after he came out of the woods. Paid him between $513 and*420 $525. There was no special agreement as to the price: was to pay what they were worth. ‘Exhibit A’ and the-representations therein were made after the locating of the-lands by me. The letter or telegram directed me to locate certain lands immediately, describing them, — the lands described in ‘ Exhibit A.’ There was probably nothing in the-letter or telegram said about quality or quantity of pine.”
We have been particular to set out the declaration and the plaintiff’s statement of his case very fully, because the-case is quite peculiar’, and we have not been able to take the-same view of the facts that was taken by the court below, and that is insisted upon here. The plaintiff regards the transaction as in the nature of a sale of a chattel, and insists that it is to be governed by the rules regarding the-sale of personalty. The argument in substance is that defendant had a property in his superior information respecting the lands and his skill in judging of their value; that he embodied these in the descriptions which he sold, and that he might and did warrant the truth of these — in which their value consisted — as he might warrant the soundness of a horse or the validity of a title. This we think is a fair statement of the plaintiff’s position, though it is stated in our own language and with brevity.
Had it appeared that the defendant was possessed of this information, and had made up his descriptions previous to the bargain between these parties, and that under such circumstances he assumed to sell his special information, the case would be so far different from the present that possibly different principles might apply. It might then be argued, with some force, that the case resembled the sale of a valuable secret, and that the rules governing the sales of personalty were applicable. But this was no such case. Here the arrangement was for the future acquisition by the defendant of information for the plaintiff’s benefit, and for the report of this to the plaintiff. It is impossible, as we think, to treat it as any thing but an employment. It was-no more a sale of descriptions than is it a sale of opinions-when a lawyer is employed to examine a case and report his views, or a physician to diagnose a case of disease. In one sense there is a sale in all such cases, but the law treats
Nor in any such case can there be any implied warranty of the absolute truth of the description given. Whoever bargains to render services for another undertakes for good faith and integrity, but he does not agree that he will commit no errors. For negligence, bad faith or dishonesty he would be liable to his employer; but if he is guilty of neither of these, the master or employer must submit to such incidental losses as may occur in the course of the employment, because these are incident to all avocations, and no one, by any implication of law, ever undertakes to protect another against them. A positive affirmation of the quality of lands as of one’s personal knowledge when he has no knowledge on the subject, whereby his employer is misled and injured, should certainly render the person making it liable, either on the ground of bad faith or of negligence; but it could not be treated as a warranty of the quality of information sold.
We think also that the court erred in its view regarding the proper rule of damages. The defendant was to supply information upon which the plaintiff proposed to purchase lands. The information embraced the amount and quality of valuable timber, the nature of the soil, etc. If the plaintiff was induced to purchase lands on representations which proved to be untrue, the measure of his loss, as it seems to us, would be perfectly plain, and would be reached by an answer to the following question: How much less is the land worth as it is, than it would have been if its condition and quality had been as represented? This is the only safe and only reasonable rule: to permit the damage to be measured by the stumpage of timber would be to introduce speculative and uncertain questions, and lead to great injustice. It can seldom or never be affirmed that the market value of a piece of land, worthless except for its timber, is equal to the aggregate of estimated stumpage value of the individual trees growing upon it. But if timber lands may be judged in this way, other lands may be estimated by computing the value of the several constituents of value
The judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.