Baker v. Maxwell

99 Ala. 558
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 99 Ala. 558 (Baker v. Maxwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Maxwell, 99 Ala. 558 (Ala. 1892).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

The present bill seeks a rescission of a contract made between Maxwell and Sanders of the one part and C. C. Baker, whereby the former conveyed to the latter a certain parcel or lot of land, the consideration being the transfer of three certain mortgages held by Baker to the grantors ; and to have Baker decreed to reconvey the land to Maxwell and Sanders, the complainants, upon a re-transfer and surrender of said mortgages to Baker, which they offer to do. The grounds upon which this relief is prayed are laid in the bill to be fraudulent concealments and misrepresentations of Baker as to the property nominally covered by the mortgages and as to the title of the mortgagors to the lands embraced in one of them; and that complainants were induced by such concealments and misrepresentations to convey the lot to respondent and take the mortgages in payment therefor. These averments need not be here stated or discussed in detail. They set forth facts, the particular concealments and misrepresentations relied on, and that complainants were influenced to convey the land by them. They are clearly not the mere conclusions of the pleader. The concealments charged were material, and, if fraudulent, as is directly charged and as is inferable from the facts directly charged, and inducive to the transaction, they are vitiating. The misrepresentations alleged were as to matters of material fact, and not the mere expression of opinion on the part of the defendant. The averments are entirely adequate, if proved, to entitle the complainants to the decree they ask so far as that relief depends upon the fraud of Baker. The demurrers which proceed on the contrary assumption were, therefore, properly overruled. — Henry v. Allen, 93 Ala. 197, and cases cited.

2. But other demurrers are in the nature of confessions and avoidance. Conceding the fraud charged and that it conduced to the result complained of, one position advanced by the demurrers is, that no relief can be had on this bill because the contract became and was an wholly executed one, in that complainants had made an absolute conveyance of the land to the defendant and the latter had fully paid the agreed consideration by transferring and delivering the [563]*563mortgages to the vendors, reciting in the endorsement of transfer that it was without any recourse whatever on him. The fullest concession of the executed character of the contract will not help the appellant. No contract can ever stand against an assault, seasonably made, on the ground that the fraud of one of the parties induced the other to enter into it, merely because every thing contemplated by it has been fully done. No transaction can be closed against the vitiating consequences of actual fraud leading to its consummation, if the aggrieved party is diligent in his attack upon it. It was long ago decided by this court, in line with the universally prevailing doctrine, that “a misrepresentation by a vendor of land, in regard to a material fact, which operated as an inducement to the purchase, upon which the vendee had a right to rely, and by which he was actually deceived and injured, is a fraud, and confers upon him the right to avoid the contract, whether executory or executed,” Foster v. Gressett, 29 Ala. 393; and there are many cases in our reports where this doctrine has since been acted on without question.

3. The contract having been entered into and the lot conveyed by complainants upon the consideration of a transfer of the mortgages to them, it is immaterial whether the bill negatives the solvency of the mortgagors or not, or whether it avers thatthe debts purporting to be secured by the instruments were not enforceable aside therefrom. The complainants were entitled to receive precisely what they contracted for — mortgages on the property described in these papers; and if, as alleged in the bill, the mortgages they did receive, though nominally embracing the property, were of no value as to the land because the mortgagor had no title thereto, and of insignificant value as to the personalty because a part thereof was no longer in existence, and other part had been inserted therein by the mortgagee without authority after execution, and by the false representations and concealments charged in uhe bill against defendant they were led to believe that the title to the realty was good, and that all the personalty was existent and efficaciously covered by the mortgages, and were induced by these fraudulent misrepresentations and concealments to exchange and convey their land for the mortgages, they were entitled to the rescission they seek whether or not the debts mentioned in the instruments could be collected apart from them. Of course, if these debts have been collected by the complainants that would be matter for answer, and would be a complete defense to the bill. But complainants having stipulated for [564]*564the transfer of a debt secured in a particular way, and enforceable by a summary and inexpensive sale under a power, this security being the inducement to the contract, it is no answer to their present claim for the defendant to say that, although by my false representations and concealments I have fraudulently induced you to.part with your property on a worthless security, when the expressed stipulation was for a security of a particular valuable kind, yet, if you can in the end collect the debt by resorting to other, more expensive and less expeditious remedies than that for which you specially contracted, you must do so; and my fraud is innocuous. Aside from these considerations, we may remark that if this were a good defense at all, it would have to be made by answer since the bill does not disclose that the debt has been or could be made by other process than the foreclosure of the mortgages, and the presumption would be, in the absence of anything to the contrary, that the debts are not collectible apart from the mortgages. And, moreover, it may be further stated here that the bill does aver the insolvency of the makers of two of the three mortgages complainants contracted for, and even'were the position of defendant in this connection a sound one, the complainants would still, so far as this question is concerned, be entitled to the relief prayed, notwithstanding the sum recovered by the other mortgage — about one-third of the whole — might be realized by suit on the note.

4. The further contention of the appellant, that the representations made were not such as complainants had a right to rely upon, but that to the contrary it was open to them to ascertain their falsity, and that they were lacking in that diligence which the law required of them in the premises in failing to make the necessary investigation, is without merit. This is manifestly true in regard to the alleged representations as to the personalty, since it does not appear by the bill that complainants had any means of knowing or ascertaining whether they were false or not; and, moreover, these representations were such that complainants had a right to rely upon them unless they knew-— not merely had an opportunity of informing themselves— that they were untrue.—Henry v. Allen, 93 Ala. 197.

With respect to the alleged false representations as to the title to the land embraced in the mortgage, the same doctrine obtains. The representations alleged, being material and conducing to the transaction, are vitiating notwithstanding the complainants might, by the exercise of diligence, have ascertained their falsity. They were representations of fact [565]*565and not mere expressions of opinion.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dorsey v. Dorsey
66 So. 2d 135 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1953)
Davidson v. Blackwood
34 So. 2d 205 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1948)
Fuller v. Scarborough
196 So. 875 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1940)
Dunn v. Ponceler
178 So. 40 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1937)
Southern Land Development Co. v. Meyer
159 So. 245 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1935)
Albert v. Nixon
156 So. 775 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1934)
Spann v. Meidinger
295 P. 321 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1931)
Newberg v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad
231 N.W. 766 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1930)
Davidson v. Brown
110 So. 384 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1926)
Lowe Armstrong v. Shinault
79 So. 22 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Stone v. Walker
77 So. 554 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1917)
Moon v. Benton
68 So. 589 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1916)
Consumers Coal & Fuel Co. v. Yarbrough
69 So. 897 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1915)
Hafer v. Cole
57 So. 757 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1912)
Dean v. Oliver
131 Ala. 634 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1901)
Vaughn v. Smith
55 P. 99 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1898)
Ansley v. Bank of Piedmont
113 Ala. 467 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 Ala. 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-maxwell-ala-1892.