224 P. 620 | Ariz. | 1924
— Anabel Gross, the appellee, sued Perkins and Franklin, appellants, to recover damages which she claims to have suffered on account of false representations made to her concerning a house which she purchased from them. The house was said to be a new stucco-covered brick house. It is conceded that it was not brick, and that part of the material which went into its construction had already served its purpose in a different structure. The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the appellee, upon which judgment was rendered.
One of the errors complained of is that the court declined to instruct the jury to return a verdict for appellants as it should have done, because it appeared from the evidence that before the sale was consummated the appellee had made some sort of an examination of the house, and should not, therefore rely upon representations made by the appellants as the basis for purchase.
The appellee was a schoolgirl, not shown to have been better informed as to house construction than most persons of like status; that the appellees were real estate brokers; that the one with whom the ne
Reference is made to some statements of the rule of law which seems to say that, where a buyer examines the thing purchased, or has the opportunity of doing so, the seller is thereby released from liability on account of any representations which may have been made. "While this statement of the rule may be applicable to some transactions, it is not universally correct. Much depends upon the relation of the parties, the judgment and experience of the buyer, and the character of the thing examined. In the present instance the walls were constructed of adobe, and were covered over with plaster on both sides, so that the adobe was nowhere visible. The framework was constructed in part of old material, which had formerly been used elsewhere; but it was either for the most part wholly concealed or covered over with fresh paint. One witness testified that he was able to detect the presence of the adobe construction by the thickness of the wall, but it is not pretended that these indications have any significance to the unsophisticated eye; nor can it be rightly claimed under the circumstances in the face of assurances which had been given by a trusted acquaintance that appellee should have conducted an investigation into the architecture
Appellants also claim that there was no evidence that the house was not in fact a “new house” within the accepted meaning of that term. The house had indeed been but recently constructed. If it had any lack of newness it was because some of the materials used in it had been formerly used for another purpose. This, it is claimed, did not make it an old house. The court instructed the jury that the term “new,” as used in this connection, presumptively related to the time of construction, and not to the character of materials which entered into the house itself; but that it was possible for the word to have been used in a different sense, and that the sense in which it was used might be gathered from all the evidence in the case. The negotiations for the purchase of the house were for the most part carried on orally, and it was properly left to the jury under these instructions to determine in what sense the term “new” was used.
It is also objected that the evidence does not sustain the verdict, because it does not appear that the representations, though untrue, were made either recklessly or with knowledge of their falsity. The assignment of error upon this ground is based upon the unreliability of the testimony of one witness, who is not impeached excepting by the contradictory testimony of one of the appellants. The credibility of these witnesses was for the jury to determine, and its determination was adverse to the appellants. There is no legal ground for interfering with such finding. The instructions under which the case was submitted to the jury were very full and clear, and free from error.
The judgment is affirmed.
MoALISTER, O. J., and ROSS, j., concur.