154 Minn. 271 | Minn. | 1923
Lead Opinion
Appeal from a judgment on the pleadings in favor of the defendant. A condensed statement of the material portions of the pleadings follows:
The complaint alleged that the parties were breeders of high grade Duroc Jersey swine. Plaintiff resided in Ohio and defendant in Minnesota. They became acquainted in the year 1919. Defendant proposed that plaintiff should come to Minnesota and become associated with him in stock farming at Spicer, where defandant had a large farm. He had gained plaintiff’s confidence and led him to believe that he could better his circumstances by going into business with him. On January 2, 1920, the parties entered into a contract which, by its terms, obligated plaintiff to purchase a half interest in defendant’s farm and personal property, and defendant to purchase a half interest in plaintiff’s swine. The property was
The complaint does not state, and was not intended to state, a cause of action for damages, in the strict sense of that term, on account of fraud inducing the contract or on account of a breach of the contract.
It does attempt to state, and states only a cause of action which assumes a rescission by the plaintiff and the plaintiff’s right to rescind the contract, because, in the first instance, of the alleged fraud inducing it, and because, in the second instance, of a breach by the defendant. Our only purpose is to recover, not damages, but'the amount with which we parted on account of the contract.
A motion for judgment on the pleadings followed and was granted.
This court has adopted the rule that the failure of one of the parties to complete the performance of his part of a contract may constitute a substantial breach entitling the other party to rescind. Karbach v. Grant, 131 Minn. 269, 154 N. W. 1071; The Staring Co. v. Rossman, 132 Minn. 209, 156 N. W. 120; The Independent Harv. Co. v. Malzohn, 147 Minn. 145, 179 N. W. 727. It has held that a repudiation of a contract by one of the parties entitles the other to treat the contract as rescinded and avail himself of the remedies which may be based on a rescission, Engel v. Mahlen, 153 Minn. 1, 189 N. W. 422, and that, if the fraud of oue- party induced the other to enter into the contract, the latter may rescind by his own act and sue at law to recover what he parted with by reason of the fraud. I. L. Corse & Co. v. Minnesota Grain Co. 94 Minn. 331, 102 N. W. 728; Niebuhr v. Gage, 99 Minn. 149, 109 N. W. 884, 109 N. W. 1. In the case at bar, plaintiff takes the position that the facts alleged in the complaint entitle him to a rescission both for fraud and for failure to perform.
The control of the corporation was a matter of the highest importance. If all the stock had been divided equally between the parties, as the contract provided, and none had been issued to Stephens and Storing, defendant could not have ousted plaintiff from the management of the corporation. Fairly construed, the complaint charges the defendant with an intentional failure to perform the contract in this respect by so placing the stock that he would have control of the corporation. If such is the fact, plaintiff
It is familiar law that upon an objection to the sufficiency of the complaint first made after the jury is impaneled and evidence is about to be taken, and upon a motion for judgment on the pleadings, every reasonable intendment will be indulged in favor of the sufficiency of the pleading. 2 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. §§ 7687, 7694. Viewing the complaint with this rule in mind, and in connection with the statement of plaintiff’s counsel which preceded the motion for judgment, we hold that the objection to the introduction of evidence under the complaint was not well taken and that the motion for judgment on the pleadings should not have been granted. There should be a trial on the merits. In accordance with the position taken by plaintiff, as heretofore stated, the issue to be litigated will be limited to the cause of action for a rescission which the complaint sets forth.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial granted.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.)
We dissent.
The original agreement had been carried out, and plaintiff should be held to his action for damages.