23 N.M. 647 | N.M. | 1918
The second defense in said amended answer was to the effect that appellee was a foreign corporation transacting business within the state of New Mexico without obtaining a permit as required by law.
Appellee filed a demurrer to appellant's second amended answer, which was sustained by the court, whereupon appellant declined to plead further, and judgment was rendered for appellee for the principal and interest of the notes and cost of suit, from which judgment this appeal was prosecuted.
The demurrer to the first defense contained in the amended answer should have been overruled. Where two parties enter into a verbal contract and agreement, and one of them assumes to reduce such agreement to writing and in so doing does not correctly reduce such prior oral agreement to writing, but fraudulently embodies therein an entirely different agreement, and presents such writing to the opposite party for signature and execution, and fraudulently states to him that such writing contains the substance of their prior oral agreement, and such statements are relied upon and accepted as true, and said opposite party is thereby induced to sign such writing, without reading the same, having it read, or otherwise being advised of its contents, he may plead such facts and conduct as constituting fraud in defense to a recovery upon such writing.
While there are authorities to the contrary, the great weight of authority supports this contention. In volume 6, R.C.L. 635, it is said:
"It has been decided that one who, by falsely representing to another that a written contract contains the provision agreed upon between them, and induces him to sign it, is not entitled to enforce the contract, although the one who signed it did so without reading it or having it read to him."
In 1 Elliott on Contracts, § 73, the author says: *651
"Some courts lay down the rule that the carelessness or negligence of a party in signing a contract does not estop him from afterward setting up that it does not contain the true agreement of the parties, in a suit thereon between the parties to such a contract, or their privies, where the party seeking enforcement, practiced fraud or deception in order to induce the other to sign. The rule laid down by the foregoing cases seems correct in principle, for if one signs an agreement, relying on the statement of the other party as to its contents, which statement proves false, the contract should be voidable as between the parties or their privies, for the defrauded party should not be permitted to take advantage of his own wrong, or to say that the other party was negligent in believing him. A majority of the courts take this view of the subject."
For cases so deciding see New v. Wambach,
For the error of the court in sustaining the demurrer to this defense the cause must be reversed. The demurrer to the second defense was properly sustaind. The answer did not show that appellee had transacted any business in the state other than that in controversy, and in the case of Goode v. Colorado Investment Loan Co.,
"Every foreign corporation, except banking, insurance and railroad corporations, before transacting any business in this territory, shall file in the office of the secretary of the territory a copy of its charter."
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court will be reversed, with instructions to overrule the demurrer to appellant's first defense; and it is so ordered.
PARKER, J., concurs. HANNA, C.J., being absent, did not participate.
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