165 Iowa 255 | Iowa | 1914
The plaintiffs owned two lots in Belle Plaine and a lot in Lisbon, and on the 18th day of February, 1910, entered into an agreement with W. J. and Ethel A. Porter, by the terms of which they exchanged said lots to said Porter for the S. W. % of section 6 in township 104 N. of range 65 W. of fifth P. M., Aurora County, S. D., containing 147.35 acres according to the government survey, more or less. Deeds were exchanged accordingly; but subsequently plaintiffs claim to have discovered that the land as above described had no'existence, and in this action for damages allege that, to induce them to make the deal, defendants represented that the land was good, well located, on a road leading to the town of 'White Lake, that eighty acres were under cultivation, that the place was practically free from stone, and had only about five acres of low land, and was gently rolling, that the soil was black loam, with clay subsoil, and worth $35 per acre, and that those representations were false, and known to be such, in that the land as so described had no existence.
'Indeed, the law seems to deal less leniently with persons without interest misrepresenting than with those who, because of interest, are naturally prone to overestimate their own property, for the former are generally held responsible for false representations of value. Medburry v. Watson, 6 Metc. (Mass.) 246 (39 Am. Dec. 726). "Walmer could have assisted Porter, or himself have accomplished the fraud, without being interested in the deal, or being Porter’s agent, or without having colluded with him. He might have proceeded in the hope of sharing the plunder at a low price to his profit, which in fact he did by buying of Porter after the trade one of the houses at much less than its value. If, then Walmer knowingly, .and to induce plaintiffs to exchange properties, falsely represented the land with intent thereby of defrauding them, he was liable for the resulting damages.
A review of the evidence will serve no useful purpose. It is enough to say that, though conflicting, it was sufficient to carry the issues to the jury.
The transcript of the original field notes, of the township boundaries and section lines disclosed that, in subdividing the township in which the quarter section purported to lie, the deputy surveyor general first ran a line from the southeast comer of the township north on the east side to the first standard parallel, reaching it thirty chains five links ‘ ‘ east of the corner to township 105 N., ranges 64 and 65 W.,” and set a post in mound for comer of “township 104 N., ranges 64 and 65 W.” A line was then run along the township line west six miles, setting stakes in mounds at intervals of forty and eighty chains. A random line was then run from the southwest comer east along the south line of the township to the one hundred and eight links south of the southeast comer, a distance of five miles and seventy-six chains and
To determine the proper adjustment of the compass for subdividing the township, the east tier of sections of the township immediately west was then surveyed, commencing at the southwest comer of township 104 N., range 65, and reach the parallel in running line between sections 1 and 2 in township 104 N., range 66, ‘ ‘ fourteen and forty-sixth hundredths chains east of the quarter section corner in south line of section 36, township 105 N., of range 66 W. of 5th principal meridian. ’ ’
The notes then recite:
I find this closing fourteen and forty-six hundredths chains east of the quarter section comer, instead of about seven chains west of the same, as was expected from the field notes given on the diagrams of the exterior township boundaries. To discover and correct my error, if any, I examined the exterior lines. I had previously examined the ninth guide meridian, which is the line between ranges 66 and 67 west for the entire distance between townships 101 and 102, 103 and 104, and found it a true north line throughout and correct. I had also subdivided township 104 N., of range 67 W., and found my closing north as expected from the field notes furnished. I had previously run north between ranges 65 and 66,
This survey of Watson, with the plat exemplifying it, in connection with these field notes excludes all reasonable doubt as to the existence of west quarter sections along the township line. The southern boundary of section 6 was but thirty-one chains and fifty links in length according to his survey, and the width of the township but seven rods over five and one-half miles at that line. According to the field notes the quarter post was first set between sections 6 and 7, a distance of thirty-five and eighty-four hundredths rods east of the township line, and forty-one chains farther on for the southeast corner of section 6. But this last comer was some distance more than five miles west of the east boundary, so that the correction made, as appears from the field notes, located the township boundary line east of where the quarter corner on the line between 6 and 7 had been located. There seems no doubt, then, that no quarter comer on the east and west lines between the sections of the west tier in the township were ever established, but that under the government survey the section corners served such purpose, and that thereunder there were no northwest or southwest quarter sections in that tier of sections.
It is not a ease of lost quarter comer calling for its location by proportionate measurements, but one where, according to the survey, the southeast quarter of the section, as laid out, includes all the land to the township line. It necessarily follows that there was no land under the description conveyed by Porter to plaintiffs.
With the repeal of the statute exacting the specific assignment of errors, disappeared the necessity of extreme particularity in stating the errors relied on for reversal. Nevertheless these should be stated with sufficient fullness and clearness in the brief to advise the court of the complaint made. Section 53 of the rules exacts “a brief and concise statement of so much of the facts as fully presents the errors and exceptions relied upon, referring to the lines and pages of the abstract.” This does not mean that the evidence,, contained in the abstract shall be repeated, but that the facts of the ease be recited with sufficient fullness, and that only to indicate the bearing of the rulings complained of. Even when the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict or judgment is challenged, it is only necessary to recite in narrative form in the briefest way the facts especially pointing out the precise issue with respect to which, it is claimed, there is a failure of proof, and as to that directing attention to the evidence in greater detail. This has the merit of focusing the investigation on the very question involved. The rule further exacts that “the brief shall contain, under separate headings of each error relied on, separately numbered propositions or points, stated concisely, and without argument or elaboration, together with the authorities relied on in support of them,” These rules were ignored by appellant in his argument, and, instead of presenting the precise errors relied on therein, and referring thereto, separately in the brief points, these could be found-only by tracing them from the brief point through the assignments of errors to some place in the abstract. Notwithstanding this, we have examined each ruling to which exception is taken, and discover no reversible error, bunching all together in our decision after the manner of counsel in their argument.
This is a correct statement of the law, though the court might have gone farther and said that, unless what one said so referred to the other as to exact a response, unless concurred in, neither was responsible for what was said by the other even in his presence. If they were not acting in concert or one for the other, neither was in any manner bound by what the other may have said in his presence, for, unless it in some way related to him, silence could not be construed as acquiescence even. It will be observed, however, that liability under the instruction can be predicated only on a finding that both defendants made false representations, and this was the rule laid down in all other instructions alluding to this phase of the case>- There was no error.
It was not essential to recovery that plaintiffs should have relied exclusively on the representations of either defendant, nor even that these should have been the principal inducement to their change of situation. “If they exerted a material influence upon his mind, although constituted only one of the several motives which, acting together, produced the result, it is sufficient.” 20 Cyc. 41; Burr v. Wilson, 22 Minn. 206; Foley v. Holtry, 43 Neb. 133 (61 N. W. 120).
The eleventh, and twelfth, and thirteenth instructions relate also to the liability of Walmer, and lay down the rules in harmony with the recent decision of this court. Davis v. Central Land Co., 162 Iowa, 269.
In so far as correct, the instructions requested were included in those given. The record is without reversible error, and the judgment is — Affirmed.