168 S.E. 820 | N.C. | 1933
Couslar owned a rectangular lot at the corner of Walnut and Broad streets in the city of Winston-Salem. He conveyed to the city a portion of the lot for the purpose of rounding the intersection of said streets, and this space was paved and sidewalks built. The remaining portion of the lot, then owned by Couslar, was in the form of a triangle. Subsequently Couslar conveyed the lot to defendant by deed duly recorded. This deed described the original rectangular lot and hence included the portion owned and paved by the city.
The defendant and the plaintiff entered into an agreement to exchange certain lands or lots, and as a result the plaintiff received a deed from the defendant for the Couslar lot. The description of the land therein was the same as that contained in the deed from Couslar to the defendant. Hence the deed to the plaintiff included the portion owned by the city and then paved and used as a street.
The plaintiff's deed, executed by the defendant, was duly recorded on 25 March, 1927. Thereafter, on 14 July, 1928, the plaintiff instituted the present suit against the defendant. He alleged that the agent of defendant pointed out the land to him before the deed was executed, and that the lot so pointed out included an area west of and adjoining the lot described in the deed. It was further alleged that in pointing out said area that the defendant did not own, the plaintiff was misled, deceived and defrauded, and that the defendant intended to deceive and defraud the defendant by such false representation. The plaintiff further alleged that the deed from the defendant to him contained a covenant of seisin and warranty, and that there was a breach of the covenant of seisin for that portion of land described in the deed which was at the time covered by the street as aforesaid. Whereupon, the plaintiff prayed damages in the sum of $2,250.
The defendant filed an answer alleging that in executing the deed to the plaintiff the draftsman had followed the description in the deed from Couslar to the defendant, and through inadvertence and mistake had included in the description that portion of land theretofore conveyed by Couslar to the city and then covered by the street and sidewalk. The defendant further denied any and all false representations with respect to pointing out any boundaries of the lot or of an area adjoining and west of the triangular lot actually owned by the defendant at the time the deed was made.
The plaintiff testified: "We went to the property located at the southwest corner of Broad Street and Walnut Street. When we go to that property Mr. Wilkes took out a little book and read the dimensions, and *510 then he stepped it off to certain points. Mr. Pfaff sent Mr. Wilkes out with me to look at that piece of property. I have seen Mr. Wilkes in and around the place of business of Realty Bond Company. He was selling real estate for the Realty Bond Company or he was carrying a paper and showing different pieces of property. Mr. Wilkes stepped off from the sidewalk now there from that point on the southern line, going west 81 and some tenths feet to an old fence that stood there at that time; then he kept on stepping around from that point, going north, to a certain point at the sidewalk where the sidewalk looked a little newer than the old sidewalk on Walnut Street. . . . Then we went along Walnut Street with the sidewalk to a certain point 50 some feet; . . . then from that point back to the point of beginning around the curve. . . . After I went out there and looked at the property I appointed an attorney to look up the title. He made a report to me, and pursuant to that report I signed a deed to my property and received deeds from them for their property and $1,050 in cash. . . . I suppose I did state in the original complaint that a part of the property pointed out to me had been deeded to the city of Winston-Salem. . . . I may have stated to Mr. Pfaff that they had deeded me something that was in the street. . . . I had a reasonable time to investigate the title to the property before I got the deed. The deed was handed to an attorney of mine employed for the purpose of investigating the title. He did investigate the title. I probably had the deed a couple of days in all investigating the title. The deeds were signed after he finished his investigation. The attorney chosen by me had done some work for me before and I had confidence in him. He reported to me that the title was all right and I relied on his statement about it. Relying upon his statement about it I accepted the deed to this property. . . . Mr. Wilkes did not do anything to prevent me from having a surveyor to locate this lot, . . . nor did the Realty Bond Company do anything to prevent me from making inquiry as to the exact location of the property. The Realty Bond Company gave me time between the date of the contract and the delivery of the deed in which to examine the title and determine for myself. I suppose it was about a week from the date of the contract until the deeds were delivered. . . . After Mr. Wilkes had pointed out the area I relied on the representation that he made as to the piece of ground that was being deeded to me." The plaintiff also testified that the triangular piece of property actually conveyed by the deed was worthless.
The following issues were submitted to the jury:
1. "Did the defendant, through its agent, point out the boundaries F to J to H to E to G and back to F, as alleged in the complaint?" *511
2. "If so, was the plaintiff induced to accept his deed by fraud and deceit, as alleged in the complaint?"
3. "What amount of damages, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover due to the misrepresentation by the defendant?"
4. "Did the defendant execute to the plaintiff a deed containing a covenant of seisin for the tract on the plat designated A, B, C, D?"
5. "Was the description inserted through the mutual mistake of the parties, and should it be corrected to contain tract designated `F, to B, to E, to G, to F,' as alleged in the answer?"
6. "If not, what amount of damages, if any, has the plaintiff sustained due to breach of the covenant of seisin?"
The jury answered the first issue "Yes," the second issue "Yes," the third issue "$1,250 without interest," the fourth issue "Yes," and the fifth issue "Yes," and did not answer the sixth issue.
From judgment upon the verdict the defendant appealed. Was there sufficient evidence of fraud and deceit to be submitted to the jury?
"The essential elements of actionable fraud or deceit are the representation, its falsity, scienter, deception, and injury. The representation must be definite and specific; it must be materially false; it must be made with knowledge of its falsity or in culpable ignorance of its truth; it must be made with fraudulent intent; it must be reasonably relied on by the other party; and he must be deceived and caused to suffer loss." Electric Co. v. Morrison,
The evidence offered by the plaintiff tended to show that the agent of defendant pointed out a certain boundary of land, and that in preparing the deed only a portion of such lot pointed out was included therein. The plaintiff testified that the relied upon the representations so made by the defendant. Nevertheless a deed was tendered covering a portion of Walnut and Broad streets and not including the area west of the land described in the deed, which the plaintiff contended was pointed out to him. The plaintiff took the deed and turned it over to an attorney in whom he had confidence in order that a full investigation of the title could be made before the consummation of the transaction. Presumably, after a full investigation, the attorney approved the title, and the deal was closed. There is no evidence that the defendant resorted to any trick, scheme or artifice tending to prevent full and complete examination of the description of the property contained in the deed as *512
well as the title to the same. Such facts classify this case in the line of cases illustrated by the following: Gatlin v. Harrell,
Furthermore, in Terault v. Seip, supra, the Court said: "An essential element of actionable fraud is the scienter or knowledge of the wrong on the part of the vendor. Where the representation is made as a part of the warranty, the vendor is held liable for his statement, whether he knew it to be true or not, but where the action is for fraud the burden is upon the party setting it up to prove the scienter."
There is no evidence in the record tending to show that the agent of defendant knew that a part of the original lot had been conveyed to the city, nor does it appear that he knew the exact boundaries of the land owned by the defendant. While it is true that the deed accepted by the plaintiff covered land belonging to the city, the jury found that such portion was incorporated through the mutual mistake of the parties. *513 Such finding of course eliminates the right to recover upon the breach of the covenant of seisin.
The Court is therefore of the opinion, and so holds that the motion for nonsuit, duly made upon the cause of action sounding in fraud and deceit, should have been granted.
Error.