Adams v. . Sage

28 N.Y. 103
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 28 N.Y. 103 (Adams v. . Sage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. . Sage, 28 N.Y. 103 (N.Y. 1863).

Opinion

Rosekrans, J.

The allegations in the complaint which were verified by the. plaintiffs, and the evidence introduced by them, show clearly that the plaintiffs had full information and knowledge of all the facts which constituted the fraud of which they complain, in regard to the sale of pork by Suydam, Sage & Go. to the plaintiffs, prior to the commencement of the action brought by the plaintiffs to recover the sums they had advanced on account of such fraudulent sales. It is distinctly averred that the plaintiffs received this information ’from their own agent, who negotiated the purchase for them, about the 26th day of July, 1842; that they believed his statement; that in consequence of it they proceeded to" the. city of New York and had an interview with Suydam, Sage & Co. in regard to the matter; and that because Suydam, Sage & Go. did not give the plaintiffs any satisfactory explanation, they commenced their suit against Suydam, Sage & Co. in the same month of July or in August, 1842, to recover the moneys advanced on the fraudulent purchase, believing that the sale was a mere pretense, *107 or, if actually made, that it was made after Suydam, Sage & Co. had received the plaintiffs’ letter countermanding their order for the purchase of the pork, and revoking the authority of their agent to make the purchase. It also appears from the plaintiffs’ evidence, that within fifteen days after the commencement of such suit, Suydam, Sage & Co., in a letter which they wrote to the plaintiffs, of the date of August 12, 1842, contradicted the statements made to the plaintiffs by Hotchkiss, their agent, in regard to the. fraudulent sale, and denounced them as misrepresentations, and proposed an amicable settlement of the suit. And that notwithstanding this the plaintiffs, relying upon the truth of the statements of Hotchkiss, proceeded in the action and noticed it for trial at the circuit in December, 1842. Indeed it appears that as early as May, 1842, the plaintiffs had an interview with Suydam, Sage & Co. at their counting room, in the city of Hew York, in which the plaintiffs contended that the sale of the pork to Hotchkiss was unfair, and alleged that they did not believe Suydam, Sage & Co. had the pork on hand for sale, and that the accounts rendered by Suydam, Sage & Co. to the plaintiffs, of the sales of the pork by. them on the plaintiffs’ account, was a sham, and that the sale to Hotchkiss was made and put upon the plaintiffs after Suydam, Sage & Co. had received'the plaintiffs’ letter countermanding the order for the purchase and revoking the authority of Hotchkiss to make it. In that interview Suydam, Sage & Co. denied the statements of the plaintiffs. Under these circumstances, in December, 1842, the stipulation was made to settle the suit commenced by the plaintiffs against Suydam, Sage & Co., and another suit commenced by Suydam, Sage & Co. against the plaintiffs to recover the balance of their account. This settlement was made upon a retraction by Suydam, Sage & Co. of their denial of the statements made by Hotchkiss to the plaintiffs of the several circumstances constituting the frauds complained of, and upon the affirmation by Suydam, Sage & Co. of the contrary of such statements. The *108 plaintiffs complain that these representations of Suydam, Sage & Co. were false, that they relied upon such misrepresentations and were deceived by them, and were thereby induced to make the settlement," and on that ground ask to have the settlement set aside.

This action having been commenced in the late Court of Chancery, this court is required, upon appeal, to review the cause upon the facts and the law. (Code, § 460.) Assuming the facts to be as stated, the referee erred in finding as a fact that the plaintiffs had confidence in the representations of Suydam, Sage & Co., and were thereby induced to enter into an agreement for a s’ettlement. Such finding is not only against the weight of evidence, but is against and contrary to evidence. Where a party to whom representations are made has the means at hand of determining their truth or falsehood, and resorts to such means, and after investigation avows his belief that the statements are false, and acts upon such belief by bringing an action to recover money obtained from him by means of the fraudulent representations, he is not entitled to credit when he alleges that upon the reiteration of the truth of the same statements, by the same party, he was induced to enter into an agreement to settle the suit and was thereby defrauded. Such investigation and ascertainment of facts, and belief in the falsity of the representations made, exclude the idea that any reliance could have been placed upon the repetition of the falsehood, and the verdict" of a jury or finding of a referee to the contrary should be set aside as unsustained by the evidence. Indeed, upon such evidence, it would be error to submit, to a jury the question whether reliance was or was not placed upon the reiterated false representations. ' Under the circumstances assumed, the law presumes that the party relied, in making the agreement, upon his own investigation, and not upon the representations of the party with whom he is dealing. This conduct, in acting in opposition to the knowledge acquired by inquiry from one who knows the facts, is attrib *109 utable, and is set down by the law, to his own indiscretion and recklessness, and not to any fraud or surprise of which, under the circumstances, he has any right to complain. Knowledge that the representations made in relation to the •subject of an agreement, as an inducement to entering into it, are false, will deprive the party having such knowledge, of all title to relief in equity. (1 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 202.) And when a party has been defrauded, and with full knowledge of the fraud settles the matter in relation to which the fraud has been committed, he has no claim to relief at law or in equity on account of such fraud. This was held by the late Chancellor in the case of Parsons, adm’r, v. Hughes, (9 Paige, 591.) In that case the agent of a mercantile firm, to make purchases abroad with the concurrence of his brother, who was a member of the firm, had defrauded his principals by false invoices of. goods purchased for them. The copartnership was subsequently dissolved and mutual releases executed between the partners, which were declared to include a full settlement of accounts between the firm and their said agent. A bill was. subsequently filed by the administrator of one member of the firm to set aside this release, upon the allegation that it and the agreement for dissolution were based upon a fair settlement of accounts between the partners, and that the plaintiff, having subsequently discovered the fraud complained of, was not bound by the release, or precluded from calling upon the partner who connived at the frauds of the agent, to account. To this bill the defendant interposed a plea in bar of the discovery and relief claimed, that before the agreement for a dissolution of the copartnership and a release, all the alleged frauds were well known to the other partners. And that the articles of dissolution and release were executed for the purpose of adjusting and fully settling and compromising all such matters and -frauds.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.Y. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-sage-ny-1863.