210 N.W. 1006 | Minn. | 1926
It is argued that the state is not liable for the torts of its officers or agents in the discharge of their official duties unless it has voluntarily assumed and consented to such liability, 36 Cyc. 881; Lane v. Minn. State Ag. Soc.
The legislature in providing for sales of property by the state may declare that they shall be subject to the doctrine of caveat emptor. It may put all the hazard, even of flagrant misrepresentation, on the buyer, but in this case it has not done so. In the absence of some such special restriction, it is the rule that, when the state becomes a litigant against an individual, it cannot deny its adversary any defense which would be open to him were his opponent another citizen instead of the state itself. Defendant is attempting nothing more than mere defense. The state is suing on a simple contract, an obligation in its favor contractually assumed by defendant. The main element of the contract-making process is the mutual assent of the parties. If there be fraud, or even misrepresentation without fraud, which induces such assent by one, the assent so induced is not genuine but spurious. So it follows that the one deceived may avoid the contract because his assent was so induced. His avoidance may be by rescission or without rescission; he may await suit against himself and then recoup his damages. The presence of the state as a contracting party does not change the substantive law of the situation. It does affect the remedy to the extent that no independent cause of action can be asserted against it, even by counterclaim, without its consent. *228
When the state sues to recover money "the defendant may in defense assert any claims which are connected with and arise out of the same transaction; that is, in such an action the defendant is `entitled to plead and prove any and all matters properly defensive, including credits and set-offs, so far as the latter are dependent on, connected with or grow out of, the transaction which constituted the subject matter of the suit.'" State ex rel. Young v. Holgate,
Moffat v. U.S.
We agree with People v. Corner, 59 Hun, 299, 12 N.Y. Supp. 936, and People v. Greylock Const. Co.
Order affirmed.