56 Minn. 501 | Minn. | 1894
This case grows out of an exchange of notes between plaintiffs and defendants. The plaintiffs were the owners of certain notes executed by W. E. Schmertz & Oo., and of certain other notes executed by Lee & Ferguson, amounting in the aggregate to over $24,000. These notes were exchanged with defendants for notes executed by defendants to plaintiffs of the same amount. This action is upon the notes thus executed by defendants.
The defendants set up, by way of counterclaim, damages occasioned by the alleged false and fraudulent representations of the plaintiffs, intended to induce, and which did induce, the defendants to make the exchange. The alleged representations were as to the financial standing and responsibility of W. E. Schmertz & Co., no representations being made as to the Lee & Ferguson paper. There is no question but that the deal was all one entire transaction, defendants’ notes being given as one indivisible consideration for both the W. E. Schmertz & Co. and the Lee & Ferguson paper.
Upon the trial, defendants, introduced evidence tending to prove all the allegations of the answer, — among others, that, by reason of these false and fraudulent representations, they were induced to make the deal, and that but for such representations no part of the transaction would have been consummated, and that defendants would not have purchased the Lee & Ferguson notes except as coupled with the W. E. Schmertz & Co. paper. The evidence tended to prove that the W. E. Schmertz & Co. paper was worthless. The defendants offered to prove that the Lee & Ferguson paper was also worthless at the time of the transaction, but the evidence was excluded; the court holding that defendants’ damages must be limited to and measured by the impaired value of the W. E. Schmertz & Co. notes, and that no damages could be allowed on account of the Lee & Ferguson paper, inasmuch as the alleged fraudulent representations did not pertain to that paper.
The principal question in the case is as to the proper measure of damages, and this is raised by the ruling of the court in excluding evidence as to the value of the Lee & Ferguson notes.
It will be observed that the gist of defendants’ claim is the fraud and deceit of the plaintiffs, by reason of which they were induced to make a deal which otherwise they would not have made at all. In accordance with the cardinal principle that compensation should be commensurate with the loss, the rule is, and always has been, that in actions of deceit, or for fraudulent representations, the damages recoverable are all those which naturally and proximately result from the fraud. Courts may have sometimes failed to use strictly accurate terms in stating the rule, and may have sometimes failed to apply it correctly to particular facts, but no court has ever questioned the rule itself.
In cases of this kind the inquiry should be — First, of what did the fraud consist? second, what action on part of the person on whom it was practiced was the fraud intended and calculated to induce, and what action- did it induce? and, third, what loss has the person suffered, as the natural and proximate result of such action?
In the present case, it is true that the false and fraudulent representations only related to the W. E., Schmertz & Co. paper, but, according to the pleadings and proof, the purpose for which they were made was to induce the defendants to buy both the W. E. Schmertz & Co. and the Lee & Ferguson paper; and the purchase of all this paper was induced by these representations, without which none of it would have been bought. Applying the rule already suggested, the damage to be recovered is the loss which defendants have sustained by acting on plaintiffs’ representations. That action was buying the W. E. Schmertz & Co. and Lee & Ferguson paper, and giving their own notes for it.
Let us see how defendants stood before the deal, and then how they stood after it. Before they were induced to make the deal, they owed nothing, and they did not own the W, E. Schmertz & Co. and Lee & Ferguson notes. That is just where they would have continued to stand, but for the fraud of the plaintiffs inducing them
It follows that the trial court erred in excluding evidence as to the actual value of the Lee & Ferguson notes at the date of the-exchange. This is all that need be said on this point, for the purposes of this appeal; but counsel for plaintiffs has, in his exhaustive and learned brief, discussed extensively the law as to the measure of damages in such cases, and has asked us to reconsider some of our decisions on the subject, because, as he claims, they are based on a misapprehension of the rulings in Smith v. Bolles, supra, and other cases of that class, and are contrary to the general current of authority elsewhere. It may be well, therefore, to refer briefly to these criticisms.
As we understand counsel, his contention is that the rule laid down in Smith v. Bolles is only applicable to cases where the suit, is not between parties to a contract of sale, and is based upon the pure tort of a stranger to the contract, but that where the action is between the vendor and vendee, in case of the sale or exchange of property, and the deceit consists of false and fraudulent representations as to the property sold, the measure of damages in an action for the deceit is, in all cases, the same as in action for breach of the warranty, viz. the difference between the actual value of the property and its value if it had been as represented.
Numerous cases are cited where that rule was applied, but in none of them will it be found that the damages resulting from the fraud exceeded, in any view' of the law, this difference in values;
A man is liable on his warranty, merely as such, only to the extent of his contract; whereas, in a case of fraud and deceit, he is liable for all the natural and proximate consequences of his fraud.
We see no reason to doubt the correctness of the rule adopted in Reynolds v. Franklin, and cases following it. Of course, the statement of the rule must always be construed in the light of the facts of the case then being considered. For example, in some of the cases it is said that the measure of damages is the difference in values of what the party was induced to part with and of what he got by the purchase. As applied to the facts of those cases, this was correct, but it would not do to adopt this as a rule of universal application, for the reason that under some circumstances it might exclude certain elements of damage naturally and proximately .resulting from the fraud. In Stickney v. Jordan, supra, the special damages claimed, even if recoverable at all, were not sufficiently pleaded, — a fact which does not clearly appear from either the opinion or the statement of the case.
Where, in actions between vendor and vendee, the fraudulent representation is also a warranty of the goods sold, and the cause ■of action pleaded may be treated as sounding either in tort or
There is nothing in the first three points in plaintiffs’ brief that requires special notice, except to say that, whatever the evidence might show, the defendants would be bound by the admission in their answer as to the value of the Lee & Ferguson notes.
Defendants’ counsel, on the argument, asked that the case be remanded merely for the purpose of assessing the value of the Lee & Ferguson paper. But, as the case comes up on a bill of exceptions, we do not feel warranted in adopting this course. The trial court is better qualified to determine whether the ends of justice would be best subserved by ordering a new trial of the whole case, or only of the one issue referred to.
The cause is remanded, with direction to the District Court to grant a new trial, either of the whole case, or only of the issue as to the value of the Lee & Ferguson notes, as it may deem just.
(Opinion published 58 N. W. Rep. 292.)