Barbian v. Grant

190 S.W. 789, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1916
DocketNo. 8468.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 S.W. 789 (Barbian v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbian v. Grant, 190 S.W. 789, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1211 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in response to an instructed verdict in a suit instituted by appellant, Peter Barbian, against appellees, W. C. Grant, John Wiltshire, and W. B. Wiltshire, for rescission. As alleged, Peter Barbian on the 2d day of December, 1911, conveyed to the defendants 20 acres of land in Taylor county of an agreed value of $800, and 9 certain promissory notes aggregating $3,165, executed by one T. H. Barksdale and secured by a vendor’s lien upon 120 acres of another survey of land situated in Taylor county, and also gave 16 promissory notes executed by himself aggregating the sum of $3,100, with a credit thereon of $1,550, all of which was given by him in exchange for a tract of '471 acres of state school land situated in Lamb county, Tex.; the plaintiff as part of said transaction agreeing to assume and pay to the state of Texas the interest and unpaid purchase money due upon said 471-acre tract of land.

The plaintiff alleged, in substance, that at the time of said exchange the title to said 471 acres stood in the name of the defendant W. O. Grant, but that, in fact, all of the defendants alike were partners and interested in it together; that the defendants at and before said exchange of properties represented the said 471 acres of land to be good, level agricultural land and situated about six miles north or a little northeast of the town of Olton, the county seat of Lamb county, and of the reasonable market value of $12.50 to $15 per acre bonus over and above the state debt of $5.25 per acre.’ It was charged that the plaintiff was not acquainted with the location and quality of the particular section of land named, but was acquainted with the section of Lamb county in which said land was represented to be, and that he fully trusted in and believed the defendants’ said representations, but that, in truth and in fact, they were false and fraudulent. It was further alleged that in truth said 471 acres of land were situated some 10 or 12 miles south and west of said town of Olton and in the sand hills, where lands were of little or no substantial market or other value. The plaintiff prayed for a cancellation of all the transfers mentioned, and sought to recover thé property that had been so conveyed by him in exchange for said 471 acres of land, together with some $300 of interest and purchase money that he had paid to the state since said exchange. He further prayed in the alternative that, if it should be found that any or all of said property had been so disposed of as that a rescission and recovery could not be had, he then be permitted to recover his damages, which were laid in the sum of $6,000.

The defendant answered by general and special exceptions, by general and specific denials, including a verified denial of the partnership alleged. ’

The court overruled all demurrers and exceptions, except one which will be hereinafter noticed, and, after the introduction of the testimony, gave the peremptory instruction to the jury to find for the defendants.

*791 Appellant first assigns error to the action of the court in sustaining the following exception:

“This defendant specially excepts to that part of plaintiff’s petition in which he asks for damages because the same is barred by the two-year statute of limitation.”

As stated, the conveyances which appellant seeks to rescind were executed on the 2d day of December, 1911, and this suit to rescind, as shown by the record, was not instituted until the 7th day of November, 1914. It thus appears that about three years elapsed between the date of the alleged fraud and the institution of the plaintiff’s suit The plaintiff, evidently with the view of avoiding any attempted defense by limitation, alleged that the fraud specified in his petition had not been discovered by him until on or about the 29th day of September, 1914, setting forth certain circumstances, not thought to be necessary to mention, as a reason why he had failed to discover the fraud earlier. In 25 Cyc. 1181, it is said:

“As a general rule, where the statutes do not otherwise provide, a right of action at law to recover damages for a fraud accrues, and the statute begins to run when the fraud is successfully consummated, not when it is discovered. So, in cases where a purchase of property is induced by fraud, the statute begins to run against the purchaser’s right of action from the time when the sale is completed. * * * But the equitable rule that the statute runs from the discovery of the fraud applies to actions of deceit in those jurisdictions where that rule has been adopted by common-law courts, or has been adopted in statutes applicable to actions at law.”

We have found among our own decisions no case in which the distinction made in the text from which we have quoted has been applied. Most of the cases that we have examined have been cases where a rescission of conveyances or annulment of decrees were sought, and they all recognize the equity doctrine that fraud will prevent the running of the statute in favor of the party who perpetrated the fraud until discovered, or by the use of reasonable diligence it ought to have been discovered. See Brown v. Brown, 61 Tex. 45; Cooper v. Lee, 1 Tex. Civ. App. 9, 21 S. W. 998; Hodges v. Hodges, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 537, 66 S. W. 239; Calhoun v. Burton, 64 Tex. 510; Smalley v. Vogt, 166 S. W. 1; Mitchell v. Simons, 53 S. W. 76. The last two cases cited will be found, we think, on examination to be cases where the plaintiffs merely sought a recovery for damages because of the alleged frauds, and hence would be maintainable as actions for deceit at law. These two cases, however, as do the others cited, proceed upon the assumption that the statute of limitations will not begin to run until the fraud was discovered, or by the exercise of reasonable diligence might have been discovered. So that we would think it reasonably safe to disregard the distinction suggested by the reading from Cyc. and assume, in this state, where distinctions between law and equity are disregarded in the pleadings, to hold that in cases of fraud limitation will not begin to run as against the injured party until the fraud has been discovered, or until it might have been discovered by the use of reasonable diligence. The reason upon which the ruling of the court under discussion was based does not appear from the record. We infer, however, that it was not so much, if at all, because of any distinction to be made in actions for rescission and in actions for damages because of deceit, but rather on the ground that the facts alleged by the plaintiff as his excuse for not having earlier discovered the fraud were wholly insufficient. If we deemed the question material, we perhaps would be inclined to agree with this view of the plaintiff’s petition. Bass v. James, 83 Tex. 110, 18 S. W. 336; Isaacks v. Wright, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 312, 110 S. W. 970; Gordon v. Rhodes & Daniel, 102 Tex. 300, 116 S. W. 40; Id., 117 S. W. 1023. But even in those states where the statute runs from the commission of the fraud it is held that, “where purely equitable relief is sought aside from, or in addition to, a mere money judgment, the statute runs only from the date of the discovery.” See 25 Cyc. 1178. And in the case before us the gist — the very essence — of appellant’s -case was for rescission, a purely equitable relief, and against which, under our authorities,- the statute of limitation does not begin to run until four years. Revised Statutes, art. 5690; Cooper v. Lee, 75 Tex, 114, 12 S. W. 483; Railway Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W. 789, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbian-v-grant-texapp-1916.