19 S.D. 91 | S.D. | 1905
This is an action by the plaintiffs., as; bus-band and wife, to rescind a conveyance of real estate' made by them to the- defendant. Rufus L. Hardy in March, 190/11.. A jury was impaneled to try special issues, and returned special verdicts;, which were,' in substance, adopted by the court as a part of bis findings ' of fact; and, such, findings and conclusions, of law being in favor of the plaintiffs, the- defendants have appealed.
It is disclosed by the- record in this- case that in. the fall of 1900 the plaintiff D. A. Thompson was-the. owner of a section of land in Kingsbury county, upon which he resided, and! upon which there was a mortgage for 84,000, and that, the defendant Rufus L. Hardy was the owner of a hotel in Bloomfield, Iowa, known as the- “Hardy Hotel”; that negotiations were; commenced in the fall of 19.00 for the exchange of the farm by the plaintiff Thompson for the hotel owned by the; defendant.Hardy, but which resulted in nothing definite being agreed upon until some time in the winter of 1901, when, upon further negotiations, it is claimed by Thompson that. Hardy represented to him that he- had sold the hotel property for 814,000;- that thereupon negotiations w’ere continued or new negotiations opened in- regard to. the exchange of the farm with one Taylor, to, whom
The grounds upon which the plaintiffs seek to rescind the contract, and compel the appellants to reconvey the property to them, are that Hardy falsely represented to the plaintiff Thompson that be had sold the property for $14,000, and that 'Thompson, i E he purchased the hotel property, could obtain possession of the same by giving 30 days’ notice to the tenant .then in possession; that these representations were false," the hotel having been transferred for a much less sum, and that the hotel property was under a written lease executed by Hardy for a period of two years from August, 1900; that Hardy made these represenlations with intent to deceive and defraud Thompson"; and that he knew they were false.
• The court, in its findings, adopts, in substance, the special verdicts of the jury, and finds that the fraud practiced by said Hardy upon the plaintiffs consisted, in part, that the said Hardy represented to the plaintiff Thompson prior to the execution of the deed from Thompson to Hardy that the hotel property had been, prior to the execution of said deed, sold by
Upon these findings of fact the court concludes that there should be a decree ordering that said conveyance from the plaintiffs to said Hardy be canceled and set aside, and that title to said farm lands be revested in the plaintiff Thompson, subject to the said $4,000 mortgage, and that the title thereto be quieted in the said Thompson as against said Hardy and all persons claiming under him, and that said Hardy and 'wife be ordered to deliver to the clerk ot this court a good and sufficient special warranty deed, executed by them to the said Thompson, re-conveying the said farm property. It clearly appears from the findings of the court'that the representations made by Hardy were false, and known to him to be false at the time they were made; that they were material; that plaintiffs were thereby induced to convey their farm lands in exchange for said hotel property under the belief that the hotel property was of equal value with the said farm lands, and that they, could obtain possession of the same upon 30 days’ notice; that said Hardy fraudulently caused to be inserted in said deed, without the knowledge of the plaintiffs, the clause declaring that the same was taken subject to the lease terminating in August, 1902, and had the same recorded before being exam? ined by the plaintiffs.
It is contended by the-appellants: ‘‘(1) The complaint
Inthe case at bar the plaintiffs, in their complaint,,, offer to restore to the defendants everything required by them under the contract; and the court finds that they have brought and tendered, into court before the trial of the action a good and sufficient deed to convey said hotel property to said Hardy, subject to the mortgage against the same. We are of the opinion that the offer of the plaintiffs, in their complaint, with the presentation of a duly executed deed to the court, constitutes a full compliance with the rule as applied to actions- in equity for the purpose of rescinding a contract.
It is further contended by appellants that the evidence was insufficient to justify the findings of the court, but, in our opinion, this contention is untenable. As before stated,, the case was tried to the court, and certain special .issues, were submitted to a jury, which found in favor of, the plaintiffs on all the issues; and the special verdicts were, in.effect, -adopted by the court, and made a part of its own findings in the case. The
It is strenuously contended by the appellants that the rep resentation in regard to the sale of the property for $14,000 was not a representation of a fact, but the expres sion of an opinion, only, as to the value of the property. We do not so regard it. It was the representation, in our opinion, as to a material fact, which naturally had a great influence in in • ducing the plaintiff Thompson to part with his farm lands. It would seem from the .evidence that the defendant on several occasions during the fall of 1900 called- the attention of the plaintiff Thompson to the advantages that would inure .to him by exchanging his farm lands for the hotel property, but that Thompson was not inclined to make the exchange until informed by Hardy that he had sold the property for $14,000, and that subsequent to such statement Thompson consented to make the exchange. In Rasmussen v. Reedy, 14 S. D. 15, 84 N. W. 205, this court held that an expression of a mere opinion might not constitute such a representation as would entitle a party to a rescission of a contract, but, when the representa tions were as to a fact material in determining the value of the property or its boundaries, and falsely made, such representations -would constitute a ground for a rescission; nnd the court further held that false material statements as to the boundaries constituted such a fraudulent misrepresentation as would entitle the plaintiff to maintain the action._ Certainly Ihe statement by Hardy that he had sold the. property for $14,000 was the statement of a material fact,, which influenced Thompson in exchanging his farm lands for the hotel prop
It is further contended by the appellants that the alleged representation that the plaintiff could obtain possession of the property on 30 days’ notice was also 'the expression of an opinion, and not material; but, in our view, that statement was of a very material fact, as Thompson had given up his farm apparently for the sole purpose of engaging in the hotel business, and the fact that he could obtain possession of the hotel, as stated by Hardy, within 30 days, would necessarily tend to induce him to enter into the contract, and was intentionally made by Hardy for the purpose of so inducing him to enter .into the contract without the full knowledge that the tenant had a lease of the property until August, 1902. It is further contended by appellants that Thompson, having accepted a deed with the clause above referred to in regard to. the lease, is'now-estopped from relying upon the representations of .Hardy in
•• ■ It is farther contended by the appellants that the findings of-the-court as to-the value of the farm property and the hotel property were not justified by the pleadings, as there were no allegations in the complaint as to the value of these properties; but this- contention is untenable,- for the reason that in order to show the materiality- of the representation, it was proper for the court to find the respective values of the properties to be exchanged.
■ • The judgment of the circuit court-and order-denying a new trial are affirmed. - -