200 Ky. 624 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
This is an action for fraud and deceit. Appellant as plaintiff alleges that defendant was in January, 1920, and had been for several years, cashier of a bank at Brad
A demurrer was filed to the petition, which was overruled, and to which the defendant excepted.
The answer put in issue the material allegations of the petition, and upon the issues thus formed the parties went to trial. At the conclusion' of the plaintiff’s evidence the court directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, and from a judgment entered on that verdict this appeal is prosecuted.
The action of the court was proper for two reasons, (1) because there is no evidence that he knew the representations made by him to appellant were false at the time he made them, and (2) because under the act of 1914 such representations to be actionable must be in writing.
The latter statement cannot be accepted as a representation because on its face it has reference to something in the future and is equivalent to no more than an expres-. sion of opinion that the obligor would twelve months hence promptly meet his obligation. This cannot be accepted as a representation of an existing fact, and will therefore be eliminated from the discussion. The material representations were that Rawlings was good’; that he had property worth between $40,000.00 and $60,000.00, and that he owed only a few little .debts that did not amount to much.
Even the evidence introduced for appellant showed that at the time Rawlings was thought to be, if in fact he was not, amply solvent, and as far as we can gather it likewise tends strongly to show that at the time of the loan he in fact had property worth approximately $40,000.00. But the evidence does show that at the time of this loan, instead of owing only a few small debts that Rawlings in fact owed from $15,000.00 to $20,000.00, and that appears to be the only material misrepresentation made by appellee, and the evidence fails wholly to show that he then knew that representation to be false.
In such actions the basis of the right of recovery is the fraud practiced upon one by making false representations to him, known at the time to be false, and made for the purpose of deceiving the plaintiff and having him act upon the same. A mere false representation, even though it be of a material fact, will not be actionable unless it was knowingly made with a fraudulent purpose to deceive the other party, and there is nothing in the evidence from which it may be fairly inferred that defendant at the time knew the representation as to the indebtedness of Rawlings was false.
The right of recovery grows out of the fraud practiced, and a mere misrepresentation, honestly and truthfully made, will, not constitute fraud even though the other party acts upon it. Ball v. Lively, 4 Dana 370; Buford v. Brown, 6 B. M. 553; Campbell v. Hillman, 15 B. M. 517; Livermore v. Middlesboro Town Lands Company, 106 Ky. 140.
“Be it further enacted that any person, an officer or agent of any corporation, or the agent of any person or firm who shall commit any one or all of the acts prohibited by section 1 of this act, shall be personally liable to any person, firm or corporation who shall suffer loss or damage thereby. ’ ’
So far as criminal liability for making representations as to the credit or ability of one’s self or another to pay, it has been held under this act that such representations not in writing do not now constitute false pretenses.. Commonwealth v. Boyd, 181 Ky. 382, Commonwealth v. Dant, 194 Ky. 691; but there has been no interpretation of that act in so far as it bears upon the civil liability of one for making representations not in writing, as to the credit or ability of another to pay.
The second section of that act provides that any person who shall commit any one or all of the acts prohibited by section 1 of the act — that is, knowingly make or cause to be made any false statement in writing respecting the financial condition of himself or another — shall be personally liable to any one who shall suffer loss or damage thereby. It appears to us from this that the civil liability provided for in section 2, as well as the criminal liability provided for in section 1, were each intended to depend upon “any false statement in writing,” and to
But whatever may have actuated the General Assembly no reasonable interpretation can be given to that act in so far as it deals with civil liability, except that one to make himself liable for false representations as to the credit of himself or another must make those representations in writing, and not otherwise. The act on its face shows a purpose to deal with the whole subject matter both as to criminal and civil liability, and appears to be wholly inconsistent with any idea that one may incur any such liability, either criminal or civil, not in writing.
. The enactment in question, so far as it applies to civil lability, is in harmony with and along the same general lines as our statute against frauds and perjuries, and we see no cause to give it other than its obvious meaning.
Judgment affirmed.