36 Minn. 287 | Minn. | 1886
This case has already been twice before this court. 34 Minn. 374, (26 N. W. Rep. 1,) and 35 Minn. 443, (29 N. W. Rep. 150.) Since it was last here, defendant has amended his answer, setting up deceit and fraudulent representation on part of plaintiff, by reason of which defendant was induced to enter into the contract. There is no question of breach of warranty in the case. That has been entirely eliminated by the decisions of this court on the former appeals. The answer is an attempt to recoup damages caused by the alleged fraud and deceit. It will be recollected that the contract was, at its inception, when the alleged fraud was committed, wholly executory. 35 Minn. 443, (29 N. W. Rep. 150.) There is no allegation in the answer that at the time when defendant received the logs he had not discovered the fraud, or that he then relied at all on these false representations. On the contrary, we think it appears affirmatively from the allegations of the answer that defendant discovered the fraud while the contract was still wholly executory, but
The ease, then, squarely raises this question: Can one who has been induced by fraud and deceit to make an executory contract for the purchase of personal property, to be delivered and paid for in the future, but who, having discovered the fraud while the contract is yet wholly executory, nevertheless thereafter accepts and uses the property, still maintain an action for damages for the fraud, or, which is the same thing, set them up by way of recoupment in an action, against him for the purchase-money? If the contract be executed in whole or in part, before the fraud is discovered, it is well settled that the purchaser need not rescind, but may retain the property, and also bring his action for damages on account of the deceit. But to-allow a person who has discovered the fraud while the contract is still, wholly executory to go on and execute it, and then sue for the fraud,, looks very much like permitting him to speculate upon the fraud of the other party. It is virtually to allow a man to recover for self-inflicted injuries. The fraud is really consummated, and the damages incurred, by the acceptance of the property and paying for it. And if this is done after the fraud is discovered, the purchaser cannot say that he sustained this damage by reason of the fraud. Ik seems to us that if a party discovers the fraud before he enters upon, the performance of the contract, he must decide whether he will go on under it or rescind. He cannot <say it is a good contract for the purpose of authorizing him to accept the property, but not binding on him as to the price to be paid for it.
The case is not analogous to that of an executory contract with an express warranty, where an action for the breach of the warranty will survive the acceptance of the property. The warranty itself is a contract collateral to the contract of sale; and, in accepting the property under the contract of sale, the purchaser does not at all waive his rights under the warranty. An action for a breach of the warranty is an action on the contract, whereas the gist of an action for fraud and deceit is, not any breach of the contract, but that the party has been led, to his damage, by fraud, into making it. Saratoga & S. R. Co. v. Row, 24 Wend. 74, (35 Am. Dec. 598;) People
Judgment affirmed.