Ballard v. Carroll

621 S.W.2d 484, 2 Ark. App. 283, 1981 Ark. App. LEXIS 770
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 9, 1981
DocketCA 81-30
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 621 S.W.2d 484 (Ballard v. Carroll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballard v. Carroll, 621 S.W.2d 484, 2 Ark. App. 283, 1981 Ark. App. LEXIS 770 (Ark. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinions

Tom Glaze, Judge.

This appeal is from a degree rescinding a sale of realty between the appellants, Tolbert S. Ballard and his wife, and the appellees, Garry Carroll, et al, and granting judgment in favor of the appellees for $23,780.92. We affirm.

W. F. Rector, Jr., who handled the purchase of the property for the appellees, first met Mr. Ballard in May, 1976, when Ballard contacted Rector about selling the Ballards’ property. Mr. Rector was employed at Rector-Phillips-Morse Real Estate Company. Rector tried to sell this property for about ten months but was unable to do so. Rector then organized a group of investors, including himself, and they purchased the property in May of 1977. The appellants gave the appellees a warranty deed with lien retained on the property. The appellees, in turn, paid the appellants @20,000 as a down payment and gave them a promissory note for the balance of @70,000.

Major flooding occurred in Pulaski County in September of 1978 and Rector testified at trial that the property involved here was covered by nine feet of water. Rector commenced an investigation of the water problem after the September, 1978, flood but testified he did not learn of the flooding history of the property or how often it flooded until July, 1979. Before Rector completed his investigation, the property had again flooded, and this time he said that the water was at the level of the dirt of the carport, which was the highest point on the property.

On July 6, 1979, and after Rector ended his investigation, the appellees sued appellants to rescind the sale of the real property, claiming the appellants represented that the property did not flood. The appellants denied any misrepresentation and counterclaimed for foreclosure, alleging default by the appellees on their promissory note. The court rescinded the sale, and dismissed appellants’ counterclaim. Additionally, the court ordered appellants to pay @23,780.92 to appellees and imposed a lien on the subject property to secure payment.

Appellants first argue the evidence does not support the chancellor’s finding that they misrepresented the property sold to appellees. The chancellor made the following findings in his decree which we find pertinent to this issue:

(3) Prior to the time of the sale, plaintiff, W. F. Rector, Jr., requested information from Tolbert Ballard about the property flooding, or if water stood on the property after rainfall. Tolbert Ballard represented that the property did not, and would not accumulate water or flood and had adequate drainage. These representations were made to induce the sale of the property.
(4) The plaintiffs were not aware at the time of the purchase that the property had a history of flooding and relied on Tolbert Ballard’s statements as to the condition of the property and purchased the property.
(5) The representations made by Tolbert Ballard to William F. Rector, Jr., as to the flooding- and accumulation of water on the property were not true as Tolbert Ballard knew or reasonably should have known at the time the representations were made. Further, the evidence indicates Tolbert Ballard concealed the water problems from the plaintiffs.
(6) After the plaintiffs took possession of the property, they discovered the property was subject to periodic flooding. This flooding materially impaired the value of the property to the plaintiffs.

Chancery cases are tried de novo on appeal, and we do not reverse the chancellor’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous (clearly against the preponderance of the evidence). Garot v. Hopkins, 266 Ark. 243, 583 S.W. 2d 54 (1979), and Rule 52(a), Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure.

In reviewing the facts in this cause, we do so in light of the law set forth in the case of English v. North, 112 Ark. 489, 166 S.W. 577 (1914), wherein the court, quoting from Matlock v. Reppy, 47 Ark. 148, 14 S.W. 546 (1886), set forth the following four tests to determine whether the rescission of contract upon the ground of fraudulent representations could be maintained:

(a) Was the fraud material to the contract; did it relate to some matter of inducement to the making of the contract?
(b) Did it work an injury?
(c) Was the relative position of the parties such, and their means of information such, that the one must necessarily be presumed to contract upon the faith reposed in the statements of the other?
(d) Did the injured party rely upon the fraudulent statements of the other, and did he have a right to rely upon them? Matlock v. Reppy, at 165.

The principles first adopted in Matlock, supra, were later applied in Neely v. Rembert, 71 Ark. 91, 71 S.W. 259 (1902). We believe it is instructive to briefly review the facts in Neely. Neely sold Rembert a 3,000 acre plantation and assured Rembert that only forty or fifty acres of the plantation contained coco grass. After the sale, Rembert discovered that coco grass covered 225 to 300 acres and patches of it were scattered over nearly all of the plantation. The Supreme Court inNeely affirmed the trial court’s decision to rescind the sale of the plantation, stating:

A vendor who makes a false statement regarding a fact material to the sale, either with knowledge of its falsity, or in ignorance of its falsity, when from his special means of information he ought to have known it, and thereby induces his vendee to purchase, to his damage, is liable, in action at law, for the damage the purchaser sustains through the misrepresentation, or to have the sale rescinded in a suit in equity, at the option of the purchaser.

We now turn our attention to the record before us to determine if there is sufficient evidence to support the chancellor’s decision to rescind the contract between appellants and appellees in accordance with the tests laid down in Matlock. We must review the testimony in the light most favorable to the appellee, and indulge all reasonable inferences in favor of the decree. Arkansas State Highway Commission v. Oakdale Development Corporation, 1 Ark. App. 286, 614 S.W. 2d 693 (1981).

Rector testified that when he first looked at the subject property in May, 1976, he and Mr. Ballard did not walk all its corners. Rector did, however, notice the foundation of the house was several feet high, there were nine steps leading from the ground to the house and the air conditioner set on a pedestal. Rector asked Ballard why the house was high, and Ballard said he had set (built) it that high because of the flood in 1927. Although Rector states he did not pursue this matter further, he did ask him if the property flooded. Ballard told Rector there had been a little water on the property in 1969, but the water was on the south end, which he called the wet weather creek. Rector testified he saw no signs of flooding around the house nor did he see any standing on the land in 1976 or 1977 during the period he had the property listed for sale and before he and appellees purchased it. Since Ballard had owned the property over thirty years and stated it had not flooded, Rector said that he did not make an independent investigation of a flood problem.

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Ballard v. Carroll
621 S.W.2d 484 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
621 S.W.2d 484, 2 Ark. App. 283, 1981 Ark. App. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-carroll-arkctapp-1981.