201 Wis. 101 | Wis. | 1930
The following opinion was filed January 7, 1930:
It was advisedly conceded upon the oral argument that the pleadings in this case are not a work of art. Upon the motion to set aside the judgment entered on cognovit the defendant offered a verified answer. After the judgment was vacated the answer so offered was apparently treated as the answer in the case. Thereupon the plaintiff filed a document denominated a reply. Under our system of pleadings there is no reply to an answer, the allegations of which are deemed denied. Sec. 263.26, Stats. It appears, however, that throughout the trial the so-called reply was treated as an amendment to the complaint. Even then it is difficult to determine upon what theory the plaintiff was proceeding. The record indicates that plaintiff’s theory of the case grew as the trial progressed. The importance of a legal theory to support the plaintiff’s contention will appear later. The written complaint in cognovit stated a cause of action on contract. Whether the plaintiff now' seeks to recover on contract on the theory that the defendant was estopped to set up his infancy as a defense, or whether the plaintiff seeks to recover on the theory that the fraudulent representations of the defendant as to age created a cause of action against him in tort, is difficult to determine. At the close of its brief the plaintiff says: “In conclusion it will be stated at the outset that the theory of the action at bar is in tort, not contract,” but in the prayer for relief annexed to the so-called reply the plaintiff agks for the full amount of the note with interest, attorney fees, and taxable costs, which he would be entitled to only upon the theory that the defendant was liable upon the note.
There are two lines of authority as to the liability of an
In R. Leslie, Ltd. v. Sheill, [1914] 3 K. B. 607, the whole subject is thoroughly discussed and the court of appeals unanimously arrives at the conclusion that an infant is not estopped to plead his infancy because he procured a loan through false representations as to his age. Appended to this case is a note in which the cases in support of each theory are collected and cited. Ann. Cas. 1916 C, p. 992.
The question which seems to divide courts in consideration of this matter is whether or not the fraudulent representations enter into the contract. Referring to the leading English case of Johnson v. Pie, 1 Keb. 913, the superior court of New Hampshire said:
“The representation in Johnson v. Pie, and in the present case, that the defendant was of full age, was not part of the contract, nor did it grow out of the contract, or in any way result from it. It is not any part of its terms, nor was it the consideration upon which the contract was founded. No contract was made about the defendant’s age. The sale of the goods was not a consideration for this affirmation or*106 representation. The representation was not a foundation for an action of assumpsit. The matter arises purely ex delicto. The fraud was intended to induce, and did induce, the plaintiff to make a contract for the sale of the hats, but that by no means makes it part and parcel of the contract. It was antecedent to the contract; and if an infant is liable for a positive wrong connected with a contract, but arising after the contract has been made, he may well be answerable for one committed before the contract was entered into, although it may have led to the contract. It has been said that ‘all the infants in England might be ruined,’ if infants were bound by acts that sound in deceit. But this cannot be a reason why the action should not be maintained for fraudulent wrongs done, for the same reason would seem to apply equally well in cases of slander, trover, and trespass.” Fitts v. Hall, 9 N. H. 441,
The question here under consideration has not been specifically dealt with by this court. In Grauman, Marx & Cline Co. v. Krienitz, 142 Wis. 556, 126 N. W. 50, the plaintiff sought recovery on a promissory note upon which the defendant was an accommodation maker. It did not appear that he had misrepresented his age, at least the court said that the preponderance of proof was to the contrary. No formal findings were made because the matter came up on a motion to open the judgment entered against the infant defendant by default. It appears, however, that the infant appeared to be a person twenty-one years of age and that the plaintiff might well have supposed him to be of age. The court said:
“Going back to the guaranty on the note, it is conceded, as the fact is, that the contract of a minor, other than for necessaries, is either void or voidable at his option, exercised within a reasonable time after his coming of age. Such a contract, not for necessaries, is, as a rule, voidable by the minor at his option, reasonably exercised, upon his coming of age and restoring the former situation as far as he is reasonably capable of doing so. There is an exception to that, gen*107 erally recognized by the courts, including our own, of which Knaggs v. Green, 48 Wis. 601, 4 N. W. 760, and Thormaehlen v. Kaeppel, 86 Wis. 378, 56 N. W. 1089, are illustrations. That is this: a minor may, in making a contract beneficial to himself, under some circumstances, preclude himself by equitable estoppel from subsequently avoiding it on the ground of his infancy. The basic circumstance rendering that applicable is actual fraud; express representation of capacity to contract, inducing the adverse party to enter into the agreement.”
Among other cases cited in support of this proposition is Commander v. Brazil, 88 Miss. 668, 41 South. 497, the annotations to which have already been referred to, in which it was expressly held that a minor who by false representations that he is of age, aided by his mature appearance, induces another to enter into a contract under the belief that he is of full age, by which he is benefited, cannot set up his minority in defense of an action upon the contract.
The case of Knaggs v. Green, referred to in the Graumam, Marx & Cline Co. Case above, did not involve the question here under consideration, and the same is true of the case of Thormaehlen v. Kaeppel.
Covault v. Nevitt, 157 Wis. 113, 146 N. W. 1115, held that an infant owner of property was not liable respondeat superior for the negligent act of a person in his employment and in charge of the property, where the infant in no way personally participated in the act.
An analysis of the cases leads to the conclusion that an infant is liable for his torts which are not connected with, and do not arise out of, his contracts. This liability is the rule without regard to the age of the infant, and without regard to whether he acted at the command of another, except in case of actual duress.
As to torts committed by an infant for the purpose of inducing another person to contract with him, there is conflict.
But in this country the overwhelming weight of authority is contrary to the English rule, cases in only two states (Massachusetts and Maryland) having held that an infant is not liable in deceit for such misrepresentations. In some states all uncertainty as to liability, where the infant falsely represents himself to be of age, has been removed by statute.
But where the infant’s representations are in regard to the subject matter of the contract, as, for instance, warranty of goods sold by him, they constitute part of the contract, for which he cannot be made liable. Note to Lowery v. Cate (108 Tenn. 54, 64 S. W. 1068) 57 L. R. A. 673, 688.
It is a matter of some importance, however, to determine whether an infant who secures benefits by misrepresenting his age to the person from whom he secured them is estopped to set up his infancy in order to defeat the contract or whether he becomes liable in an action for deceit for damages. In this case, if there is an estoppel which operates to prevent the defendant from repudiating the contract and he is liable upon it, the damages will be the full amount of the note plus interest and a reasonable attorney’s fee. If he is held liable, on the other hand, in deceit, he will be liable only for the damages which the plaintiff sustained in this case, the amount of money the plaintiff parted with, which was $352 less the $25 repaid. There seems to be sound reason in the position of the English courts that to hold the contract enforceable by way of estoppel is to go contrary to the clearly declared policy of the law. But as was pointed
It is considered that the sounder rule is that which holds an infant under such circumstances liable in tort for damages. This rule is not in accord with the intimation contained in Grauman, Marx & Cline Co. v. Krienitz, supra; that is, that a benefit must have accrued to the infant. It is considered the court was not committed ,by what was said in that case. The question here presented was not under consideration in that case.
The cases quite uniformly hold that the fraud must be actual, not constructive; that mere failure of the infant to disclose his age is not sufficient. This quite apparently for the reason that the infant himself may be unaware of the legal consequences of his acts and that it is his affirmative wrongdoing which leads to liability. Some of the cases emphasize the fact that the infant must have had actual discretion as opposed to legal discretion. That is a matter it seems to us more properly disposed of in ascertaining whether or not the person seeking to hold the infant reasonably relied upon the representations made by him. Quite obviously a child ten years of age could not represent himself to be twenty-one years so as to warrant any one dealing with him upon that representation.
As already intimated, the trial court did not have the benefit of any legal theory upon the trial of this case, and if we held parties to compliance with any system of pleadings the plaintiff would probably be turned out of court and required to bring an action in deceit or to amend the pleading and submit to a new trial. However, under our liberalized procedure which permits almost anything done to be construed
By the Court. — Judgment appealed from is reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $352, less $25 repaid, with interest.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on March 4, 1930.