Alvarez v. Brannan

7 Cal. 503
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 7 Cal. 503 (Alvarez v. Brannan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alvarez v. Brannan, 7 Cal. 503 (Cal. 1857).

Opinion

Burnett, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court—Terry, J., concurring.

On the twenty-eighth day of December, 1849, defendant sold to Santiago H. Vives, by deed of bargain and sale, a certain lot in the city of Sacramento for the sum of six thousand dollars, in cash. The defendant, in the month of May preceding, had sold and conveyed the same lot to Peter H. Burnett. Vives died in December, 1850. The taxes on the lot in question were paid by plaintiff, and the fact of the deed to Burnett was not discovered [507]*507by plaintiff until within six months prior to the commencement of this suit. When the prior deed to Burnett was discovered, plaintiff demanded the purchase-money of defendant, with interest, claiming as surviving partner of Vives, and alleging that the money paid-was partnership-funds, and invested for their joint benefit. Defendant offered to procure the title to the lot, and convey the same to the person entitled thereto. This was refused by plaintiff, and this suit was brought to recover the purchase-money, with interest. Plaintiff alleges fraud on the part of the defendant, and defendant admits the execution of the prior deed to Burnett, but insists that his sale to Vives was a mistake, and no intentional wrong. After commencement of the suit, defendant procured the title from the grantees of Burnett, and in his amended answer offered the same to plaintiff, if the Court should decide that plaintiff was entitled to it. The plaintiff demurred to the amended answer, and'..the demurrer was sustained. The issues were found for the plftintiff, and judgment given accordingly, from which defendant a|j&als to this Court.

The first important question, going to tM merits of the controversy, is whether defendant was guilty 'of such fraud as to entitle plaintiff to rescind the contract, and recover the purchase-money. The counsel for defendant insists that, “in order to make out fraud there must be knowledge and intention to deceive.” It is true that “ an evil act, with an evil intent, is a positive fraud, in the true sense of the term.” 1 Story’s Eq. J., § 192. But it is equally true that, “ whether a party thus misrepresenting a material fact, knew it to be false, or made the assertion without knowing whether it were true or false, is wholly immaterial.” If a party asserts that as true, which he does not know to be true, it is a false representation. If he intends simply to state his belief upon information, then he should state it in that precise form, so as to apprise the other party of the true grounds upon which his statement is made. A party will always be held to make good his statement in the form in which he makes it. If he states- a thing as true in general terms without qualification, then he is presumed to do so upon his own knowledge, or at his own peril, and must make good his assertion.

But there is another kind of actual fraud, when there is no intention to deceive, actually existing in the mind of the party at the time of the transaction, but there is such an amount of gross carelessness as constitutes conclusive evidence of such fraudulent intent. Judge Story, in his Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence, under the head of “Actual Fraud,” says: “And even if the party innocently misrepresents a material fact by mistake, it is equally conclusive, for it operates as a surprise and imposition upon the other party. § 193. In support of this position he refers to a number of cases, and among others to the case of Pearson v. Morgan, 2 Bro. Ch. R., 385, .“ where A being interested in [508]*508an estate in fee, which was charged with eight thousand pounds sterling in favor of B, was applied to by C, who is about to lend money to B, to know if the eight thousand pounds sterling was still a subsisting charge on the estate. A stated that it was, and C lent his money to B accordingly; it appearing after-wards that the charge had been satisfied, it was nevertheless held, that the money lent was a charge on the lands, in the hands of A’s heirs, because he either knew, or ought to have known, the fact of satisfaction, and his representation was a fraud on G.”

The case of Burrows v. Lock, 10 Vesey, Jr., R., 475, is in point. Lock was trustee of one Courtwright, and plaintiff applied to him for information as to what amount Courtwright was entitled to, when Lock told plaintiff expressly that Courtwright was entitled to two hundred and eighty-eight pounds sterling, and had a right to make an assignment to that extent, knowing that he had previously agreed to give another person ten per cent, out of the fund. Sir William Grant, in delivering the opinion of the Court, said: “The excuse alleged by the trustee is, that though he had received information of the fact, he did not at that time recollect it. But what can the plaintiff do to make out a case of this kind, but show; First, that the fact as represented is false; and Second, that the person making the representation had a knowledge of a fact contrary to it ? The plaintiff cannot dive into the secret recesses of his heart, so as to know whether he did or did not recollect the fact, and it is no excuse to say he did not recollect it.”

It is indeed difficult for the law to lay down any other rule than the one referred to. The intention of a party can only be shown by proof, and when the injured party proves that the fact, as represented, was not only untrue, butn that the person knew it to be untrue, he can show no more, and unless this be sufficient, he would be wholly unable to prove the fraud. And if a party could avail himself of his own carelessness and forgetfulness, and thus throw the consequences of his own acts upon the innocent party, then he could reverse the rules of right reason, and receive a reward, when responsibility was his due. The law must proceed upon practical principles, and act upon simple and efficient rules. A party who makes a deed is bound to know its contents, except when obtained by fraud or force, and once knowing its contents, he is bound to remember them at his own peril. Innocent parties cannot suffer by his forgetfulness. They cannot refresh his memory; he can. It is his business to remember his own acts. If he forgets, he must be equally as responsible to the party injured, as if he had not forgotten. And in this case it does not matter whether there was any intention to deceive or defraud Vives, existing in the mind of de[509]*509fendant, or not, at the date of the deed; he is equally responsible, not morally, but in construction of law.

The next question arising in this case is, whether the defendant had the right to procure the title, and compel plaintiff to receive a conveyance, after demand of the purchase-money, and at any time prior to final judgment in the case. The defendant's counsel insists that he has this right, upon the ground that he only asks the privilege of making good his representation, and of giving to plaintiff all that plaintiff bargained for. In support of this ground, the learned counsel have referred to several authorities, and among others to the cases of Brown v. Haff & Lyons, 5 Paige, 235, and of Winne v. Reynolds, 6 Paige, 407. Both of these cases were bills in equity, by the vendor, to compel the vendee to accept a deed, and complete the purchase. In the first case, the defendant, Haff, alleged in his answer, that the complainant had defrauded him, in making the contract, and could not give a perfect title to the land.

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