53 F. 415 | 8th Cir. | 1892
(after stating the facts.) The basis of this suit is the fraudulent misrepresentation which induced the sale and conveyance of May 15, 1882. The relief sought, so far as these appellees are concerned, is the rescission of the conveyance and contract of sale, and the restoration of the parties to the condition in
“Where a party desires to rescind upon the ground of mistake or fraud, he must, upon the discovery of the facts, at once announce his purpose, and adhere to it. If he be silent, and continue to treat the property as his own, he will be held to have waived the objection, and will be conclusively bound by the contract, as if the mistake or fraud had not occurred. He is not permitted to play fast and loose: Delay and vacillation are fatal to the right which had before subsisted. These remarks are peculiarly applicable to speculative property like that here in question, which is liable to large and constant fluctuations in value. Thomas v. Bartow, 48 N. Y. 200; Flint v. Woodin, 9 Hare, 622; Jennings v. Broughton, 5 De Gex, M. & G. 139; Lloyd v. Brewster, 4 Paige, 537; Railroad Co. v. Row, 24 Wend. 74; Minturn v. Main, 7 N. Y. 220; 7 Rob. Pr. p. 432, c. 25, § 2; Campbell v. Fleming, 1 Adol. & E. 41; Sugd. Vend. (14th Ed.) 335; Diman v. Railroad Co., 5 R. I. 130.”
Nor can a vendor industriously close Ms eyes, stop Ms ears, or re; fuse to believe the evidence of Ms senses, when notice of the fraudulent practices of a purchaser is placed before him, and thus escape from the application and effect of this principle of law. Notice of facts and circumstances which would put a man of ordinary intelligence and prudence on inquiry is, in the eye of the law, equivalent to knowledge of all the facts a reasonably diligent inquiry would dis-1 close. “Whatever, is notice enough to excite attention, and put the party oh his guard, and call for inquiiy, is notice of everything to which such inquiry might have led. Where a person lias suf
The apx>liealion of these principles to the facts disclosed by this bill is decisive of this case. The only facts alleged that are at all sufficient to he considered as ground for the relief sought are that Sabin, who was one of the vendor’s at to- neys, concealed the fact that he was jointly interested in the purchase, and misrepresented the amount required to bo paid on account of the tax liens and the value of the vendor’s interest in the land when he procured the deed i.o Beacliley: but tlie axipellants have seen fit ro set forth in their bill, and thereby to admit, that Mi'. Hmith, who vas also an attorney of the vendor, residing at Beatrice, Neb., equally interested with Sabin in, and equally conversant with, the pen- ling action, and the land it involved, fully notified this vendor, in writing, in May, 1882, and within 40 days after lie made the sale and deed to Beacliley, of every material fact that had been concealed or misrepresented by Sabin. It is difficult to imagine more conclusive proof than this that the vendor then discovered the fraud. He was fully notified of it. by an attorney who was employed to watch his interests, and who, he knew, had every means of knowledge; and this at l.orney referred him to the records of his county to substantiate his statements. These allegations of the bill are the equivalent of a positive averment that Mr. Holt had full knowledge of this fraud in May, 1882. What, then, was the action of Mr. Holt when this fraud was t,hus discovered, and what was its legal effect? He did not return the purchase money; he did not announce his intention to repudiate the sale; he did not seek to recover back his ■ land, or to recover damages for the injury he had sustained; he did not complain of if, or notify his children or any one else of the fraud that had been perpetrated upon him; bub he quietly retained and used his purchase money, and lived on in peace and silence for seven years and seven months, until he died; aud the first complaint of this fraud is made by his heirs, more than eight years after its discovery. The course thus pursued by this vendor leads inevitably to the conclusion that, after learning all the facts, he deliberately elected and intended to keep his purchase money, and to stand by and ratify his sale; but, whatever may have been his intention, his silence during those seven years while the property conveyed was constantly changing in value and becoming a, platted addition to a city, was an effectual and irrevocable ratification of his sale and deed, and binds him and these heirs who claim under him as conclusively as would an independe nt contract, deliberately made after full knowledge of all the facts. Neither he nor his heirs could thus play fa-st and loose with this eomracb for eight years after the discovery of the fraudulent xeránticos. Long before Ms death all objections to it had been waived, and it had been irrevocably ratified by this action of the vendor, or, rather, by his failure to act; and upon this ground the decree below must stand.
There is another reason why this decree must be sustained. It
Tn the courts of Nebraska remedies at law and in equity may be administered in a single action, and by the same court; the distinction between the forms of actions at law and suits in equity has been abolished. It follows that the vendor in this sale was barred by this statute of all relief in the courts of that state four years after he discovered this fraud, or in May, 1886.
In cases of concurrent jurisdiction, the federal courts, sitting in equity, consider themselves bound by the statutes of limitation which govern courts of law in like cases, and this is rather in obedience to the statute of limitations than by analogy. In many other cases they act upon the analogy of the statutory limitations at law. Courts of equity generally act or refuse to act in analogy to the statute, and they will not be moved to set aside a fraudulent transaction at the suit of one who has been quiescent during a period longer than that fixed by the statute of limitations after he had knowledge of the fraud, or after he was put upon inquiry with the means of knowledge accessible to him. Wagner v. Baird, 7 How. 234, 257; Godden v. Kimmell, 99 U. S. 201, 210; Burke v. Smith, supra; Kirby v. Railroad Co., supra; Boone Co. v. Burlington & M. R. R. Co., 139 U. S. 684, 692, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 687. This suit was commenced January 3, 1891. Mr. Holt, under whom appellants claim, discovered the fraud which is the basis of the suit in May, 1882. Every action in the courts of Nebraska for relief on this account was barred more than four years before this suit was commenced. It follows that the court below properly refused to be moved to set this sale and deed aside after the victim of the fraud had remained quiescent for a period longer than that fixed by the statute after he discovered it.
The rule that length of time is no bar in equity to a suit for relief from an actual fraud or a constructive trust clearly proved, which has been fraudulently and successfully concealed from the party aggrieved, has no application to this case. One of the qualifications of this rule is that the facts constituting the fraud or trust must have been fraudulently and successfully concealed from the injured party. Badger v. Badger, 2 Wall. 87, 92. In the case we are now considering the facts constituting the fraud were all disclosed to the party injured
“When the facts and circumstances are such as to put a reasonable mail upon inquiry, that obligation is not satisfied by an inquiry addressed to the chief actor in the suspected fraud, who lias every motive for concealing the truth, when bettor and more reliable sources of information are open to him.”
See, also, Wood v. Carpenter, 101 U. S. 135, 139-143, and cases there cited.
The allegations in the bill that the vendor, Holt, was for 10 years before his death old, credulous, aud so feeble in mind and body that he was unfit to transact business, are not sufficient to prevent the running of the time named in Ibis statute. Tixe statute itself prescribes the disabilities which shall have this effect. They are infancy, coverture, insanity, and imprisonment. Consol. St. 2Íeb. p. 97.1, § 4553. “Exprossio unius est exelusio alterius,” and-it is uot the province of the courts to add to these disabilities either age, infirmity, or credulity. These allegations of the bill do not amount to an averment that this man was insane, or non compos xxxentis, for Lord Ha.rdwicke says that—
“ ‘Being non compos’ — of unsound mind — are certain terms in law, and import; a total deprivation of sense'. Now, weakness does not carry this idea along with it; but courts of law understand vhat; is meant by ‘non compos’ or ‘insane,’ as they are words of determinate signification.” Ex parte Barnsley, 3 Atk. 1G8.
The law, therefore, must deal with this vendor and his acts on the presumption that he was a man of ordinary intelligence and prudence, because, as was well said by Ver planck, Senator, in Stewart’s Ex’r v. Lispenard, 26 Wend. 303:
“To establish any standard of intelligence or information beyond the possession of reason in the lewest degree, as in itself essential to legal capacity,*422 would create endless uncertainty, difficulty, and litigation; would shake the security of property, and wrest from the aged and infirm that authority over their earnings or conveyances which is often their best security against injury and neglect.”
Besides, it appears from this bill that within these 10 years during which this vendor is alleged to have been so feeble in mind and body that he was unfit to transact business he was strong enough in body and vigorous enough in mind to walk from his home in Illinois to Beatrice, Neb., and make the contract with his attorneys for the prosecution of the action against the holder of the tax title, which resulted in the recovery of this land, and we should hesitate long to establish the rule that a man of such strength and ability was incapable of transacting his own business.
The result is that this vendor, by his retention and use of the purchase money, and his silence and acquiescence in the sale of his land for more than seven years after he discovered the fraud which induced it, irrevocably ratified that sale, and neither he nor his heirs can now be heard to repudiate or rescind it; and, moreover, a court of equity, which acts or refuses to act in analogy to the statute of limitations, will not now be moved to set aside this sale after this vendor has remained silent for a longer period after he discovered the facts constituting the fraud than the time limited by the statutes of Nebraska for the commencement of actions for relief on account of it.
The decree therefore is affirmed, with costs.