By our former decision the defendant’s liability was determined, but because of error in the instructions a new
It is contended that a verdict for the defendant should have been directed, as, the wrong suffered by the plaintiffs having been joint, they could not sever and bring separate actions. But, if this question were treated as still open, the rule is well settled, that in actions of tort the defendant must plead in abatement the nonjoinder of those whom he contends should have been joined as plaintiffs, and cannot rely on this defence in bar of the action. May v. Western Union Telegraph Co. 112 Mass. 90, 93.
Mor were the plaintiffs limited to nominal damages, for reasons sufficiently stated in the former opinion, where the nature and extent of the defendant’s liability is considered and decided.
The exceptions also to the instructions that if the assessment of exact damages might be difficult because of the character of the property sold, when considered in reference to the terms of the contract, the difficulty in reaching a just result would afford no reason for relieving the defendant from the consequences of his fraud, are groundless. The relations of the parties and the nature of the misrepresentations were such, when viewed in connection with what the plaintiffs bought or were led to believe they had purchased, that the jury might find the. application of the rule which was given as to damages attended with much doubt and perplexity. It was not only competent but necessary for the judge to direct their attention to the duty they were required to perform, by giving the plaintiffs’ second request. Morse v. Hutchins, 102 Mass. 439, 440.
It was said in Thomson v. Pentecost, 206 Mass. 505, 512, that “ the damages to which the plaintiffs were severally entitled were to be measured by the difference between the actual value of what they severally received and what that value would have been if the defendant’s representations had been true,” and throughout the second trial this rule was followed and enforced.
The letters which passed between the parties, the conversations between them, the lease and any statements made by the defendant to the witness Beers as to the terms of sale, or that the plaintiff Thomson was not cognizant that the farm had not been profitable, were relevant and properly admitted as bearing on the value of what the plaintiffs actually received at the time of purchase as compared with what the value would have been if the representations had been true. The testimony from qualified experts as to the value of the defendant’s dairy, including the stock, the lease and the milk route for the period •of one year, and stating at what sum the property must be capitalized to produce the income represented by the defendant, was admissible for the reasons given in Thomson v. Pentecost, 206 Mass. 505, 510, 511. The evidence of Beers, who occupied the farm the' year before the sale, that he had lost money,'is to be read in connection with his statements previously referred to, that he had frequent conversations with the defendant in which he informed him that not only was the farm unprofitable, but because of the loss entailed in its management he did not care to continue in occupation. It was a question of fact whether the farm under ordinary conditions could be made to yield a
It is unnecessary to go more at length into the questions raised by the exceptions. We find no error of law in the rulings as to evidence, or in the refusals to give the requests, or in the instructions to the jury. Thomson v. Pentecost, 206 Mass. 505.
Exceptions overruled.