Burgess v. Charles A. Wing Agency, Inc.

11 P.2d 811, 139 Or. 614, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 179
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 11 P.2d 811 (Burgess v. Charles A. Wing Agency, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess v. Charles A. Wing Agency, Inc., 11 P.2d 811, 139 Or. 614, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 179 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

We shall refer to the Wing Agency as the defendant. Uncontroverted evidence showed that prior to February 8, 1930, the plaintiffs were the owners of the merchandise and fixtures which constituted a grocery store in the city of Medford and that, pursuant to a desire to sell the store, they signed a *616 document prepared by the defendant which, after describing the store and placing upon it a valuation of' $7,000, authorized the defendant as their'agent to find a buyer. The plaintiffs’ financial circumstances were such that they could accept nothing but cash in the event of a sale, and they so informed the defendant. One Charles R. Gail, who was the owner of a seven-acre tract of land adjacent to the city of Medford, visited the defendant’s office and expressed a desire to purchase the plaintiffs’ store if he could apply his land as a part payment upon the purchase price. The defendant then talked to the plaintiff A. C. Burgess and later took him to Gail’s land. After some delay the plaintiffs- acquiesced in the terms suggested by Wing and he then prepared a contract which the plaintiffs, together with Gail and the latter’s wife, signed. This, in substance, provided that the plaintiffs should convey their store to the Gails at a price of $7,160, $4,500 of which sum should be discharged by a deed to the land. It will be observed that at the outset the defendant was the agent of the plaintiffs only. In the negotiations just mentioned it became Gail’s agent also and the contract which Wing prepared recited that it represented all parties and therein each bound himself to pay a commission. The plaintiffs, in obedience to the contract, transferred to the Gails the grocery store and the latter conveyed to the plaintiffs the land. The plaintiffs charge that in the negotiations the defendant deceived them into the belief (1) that the seven-acre tract of land was worth $4,500; (2) that the defendant already had a purchaser who was willing to pay for the land that sum of money; and (3) that, in any event, the land could be sold within a period of six months for at least $4,500. We shall not mention the other charges of fraud alleged in the complaint because the assign *617 ments of error, do not concern them. The complaint avers that the value of the land did not exceed $1,500. Both plaintiffs testified that the alleged representations were made, that they believed them and relied upon the statements of Wing when they consummated the transaction. Plaintiffs ’ witnesses testified that the value of the land did not exceed $1,500. This evidence of value was scarcely disputed by the defendants. When Wing was asked for his opinion of the value of the land he repeatedly sought to evade answering by countering with the replies, “The property was neither soup nor fish. * * * Who was capable of stating the value?” etc., and finally replied, “If you were going to go out and sell it under the hammer and sell it as a ranch, it wasn’t salable.” He added that as a subdivision it was worth $4,500. The defendant admitted that he had made representations concerning the value of the land and his ability to resell it within a period of six months, but testified that his promises were conditioned upon the land being subdivided into half-acre lots improved with streets and other facilities, and that he be invested with the exclusive agency for the sale of the land.

Only three assignments of error are presented by appellants’ brief. Two of these are predicated upon the circuit court’s refusal to read to the jury instructions requested by themselves and bearing numbers 1, 3, 2 and 6. The third assignment of error challenges a ruling made by the circuit court which sustained the plaintiff’s, objection to a question propounded to Wing.

. Requested instruction No. 1 states that before the plaintiffs would be entitled to a verdict it would be necessary that the evidence should show that the defendant was guilty of the charge of fraud alleged in the complaint, and that a fraudulent representation may *618 consist of a statement made by one who knew it was false when he made it, or of a statement made recklessly without regard for its verity. This requested instruction also stated that before a representation can become actionable it must appear that the plaintiffs relied upon it, believed it was true, and were misled thereby. The third requested instruction enumerated the six elements of fraud in language very similar to that employed in this court’s decision in Wheelwright v. Vanderbilt, 69 Or. 326 (138 P. 857). Eequested instruction No. 2, after stating that a representation to be actionable must concern a material matter concerning which the complaining party did not possess adequate knowledge, continues: “Where the means of knowledge are at hand and equally available to both parties, and the subject of purchase is alike open to their inspection, if the purchaser does not avail himself of these means and opportunities, he will not be heard to say that he has been deceived by the vendor’s misrepresentations without further showing that he has been prevented from making such investigation through some act of the defendant.” The sixth requested instruction states: “If the jury finds from the evidence that there was no confidential relationship existing between the defendants and the plaintiffs in connection with the sale or the exchange of the property in question, or no special duty on the part of the defendant to disclose to the plaintiffs the actual value of the property taken in exchange by them, and that the parties were dealing at arm’s length, it does not help the purchasers who accept and rely upon the statements of the vendor or his agent, as to the value of the property when no warranty is intended, and when the language used is not an affirmation of some specific fact, but is merely an opinion.”

*619 The first assignment of error is based upon the first and the third requested instructions which, it will be observed, state in an abstract manner the elements of fraud. This assignment discloses no error if the instructions actually given imparted to the jury the same information which constitutes the subject-matter of these requested instructions. Without setting forth the portions of the instructions actually given, we state our conclusion that they fully and in well chosen language conveyed to the jury all of the information contained in these two requested instructions. The court’s instructions not only stated to the jury the elements of fraud but also, to the limited extent permissible, showed the jury how to apply them to the circumstances described by the two sets of witnesses. In fact, the appellants’ brief does not argue that the instructions given failed to instruct the jury upon the common elements of fraud, but endeavors to support this claim of error by urging that “the court should have called to the attention of the jury the two alleged representations of an immediate resale as against a resale within a period of six months after the property had been put in shape for such sale by subdividing the same * * * and should have instructed the jury that plaintiffs must prove that they believed and relied upon the alleged representations that Wing had a buyer then ready and willing to buy at $4,500.

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Bluebook (online)
11 P.2d 811, 139 Or. 614, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-v-charles-a-wing-agency-inc-or-1932.