178 Mass. 322 | Mass. | 1901
This is a bill to redeem from a tax sale. There is an answer and also a cross-bill by the defendant, and a demurrer to. the cross-bill by the plaintiff. The demurrer was sustained, the cross-bill was dismissed, and a decree was entered for the plaintiff upon its bill. The defendant appeals. The question before, us concerns only the dismissal of the cross-bill. The case intended to be made by the cross-bill is this. The plaintiff derives its title from one Melina G. Kelley through one Rice, and holds it subject to the equities, if any, of Kelley against. Rice. The defendant (the plaintiff in the cross-bill) derives his title through a subsequent conveyance from Kelley, and has succeeded to her equities. We express no opinion whether in fact he has succeeded to them. Foster v. Wightman,
We assume that upon a general ^emurrer we are to consider the case evidently intended to be made, without too close a criticism of the words used. But the demurrer in this case called attention to the insufficiency of the allegations of fraud, and in view of the fact that no amendment was made it is fair to suppose that the pleader has stated the case as strongly as he could. We are of opinion that although the case comes very near the line the cross-bill does not make out a title to relief.
The cross-bill does not allege that Rice intended not to give
The only representations alleged to have been made are that Rice, th‘e speaker, wras a man of large means and credit and had superior facilities for raising money, that he could raise it on easier terms than Kelley could, and that if he had her land he could at once get $12,000 upon a mortgage of it; These we must assume were made with knowledge of their falsity, and with fraudulent intent. But none of them in our opinion reaches the point at-which equity interferes. Rice’s interest was manifestly adverse to Kelley’s, and the parties were at arm’s length. They stood like the parties to a sale, or at least were not in confidential relations. The statement concerning the mortgage by its very terms and nature depended on the value of the security, a point on which Kelley presumably was at least as well qualified to judge as Rice, and according to the defendant’s valuation it was absurd on its face. Necessarily too it was a mere prophecy as to the future, not a statement of any material present fact. The representations concerning Rice’s solvency and credit raise a nicer question, but they do not change the result.
It may be that fraudulent representations as to the solvency of a third person in terms as general as those alleged would give a right of action. See Bowen v. Carter, 124 Mass. 426; Andrews v. Jackson, 168 Mass. 266. It may be that such representations as to one’s own solvency knowing that he was insolvent at the moment would warrant the granting of relief. Cincinnati Cooperage Co. v. Gaul, 170 Penn. St. 545. See Morris v. Talcott, 96 N. Y. 100. It may be that they would have equal effect if they purported to sum up. specific data before the speaker. Morse v. Shaw, 124 Mass. 59. So no doubt if the
But the representations alleged, when standing by themselves, unqualified by any further circumstance, are of such elastic meaning and so obviously may be wholly dependent upon an optimistic view of his own case, that, when they are made by one party to a bargain, the other party relies upon them at his peril. Or if another form of words be preferred, it may be said that such a statement without more is to be taken to import only an expression of opinion, and that for that reason the other party follows it at his own risk. Lyons v. Briggs, 14 R. I. 222. Jude v. Woodburn, 27 Vt. 415. Deming v. Darling, 148 Mass. 504, 505. It will be observed that it is not alleged that Rice knew that he was insolvent, and that all the allegations of fraud would be satisfied by showing that Rice made the supposed statements, and that at the time he knew that he was a man of small means, without important standing as a man of wealth.
There is no element of a fraudulent promise, that is, of an implied and fraudulent representation of intention, in the case, because, as we have said, there is ro allegation that Rice made his promises with intent not to perform them. The effect of those promises, if anything, as contracts does not come into question here. We must take the cross-bill as intended for a cross-bill properly so called, and not as an anomalous proceeding under St. 1887, c. 383, § 3. The prayer for an account of what is due Rice and others, to be sure, looks in the direction of an affirmance of the transaction, treating the conveyance of the land to him as a valid security, although only a security. But the final prayer that the plaintiff be debarred from having or claiming any title or right in the premises adverse to the defendant sounds in rescission, and asks the relief that naturally
Decree affirmed.