Carroll v. Rice

1 Walk. Ch. 373
CourtMichigan Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Walk. Ch. 373 (Carroll v. Rice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carroll v. Rice, 1 Walk. Ch. 373 (Mich. Ct. App. 1844).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

On the 28th of July, 1836, Carroll purchased of Nehemiah O. Sargeant his interest in the village of Kent, at the Rapids of Grand River. Sargeant and Lucius Lyon were at that time joint proprietors of a large part of the village plat, and had made, and were then engaged in making divers improvements, and were the owners of considerable personal property, connected with their village speculation, as materials for building, teams, and instruments for the construction of a canal then in part completed, and the like. They were also parties to various contracts for the sale of village lots, and the joint holders of bonds and mortgages, given for village property sold by them. Can-oll was to take Sargeant’s interest in the village speculation, to succeed to all his rights, and assume all his liabilities, and to pay Sargeant $83,000, — viz: $5,000 in cash, $18,000 by a draft at ninety days on the Phcenix Bank in the city of New York, and $60,000 in twelve annual instalments of $5,000 each, with interest on each instalment when paid. The necessary papers were executed, and possession was taken of the property by Carroll. Sargeant died in September, 1838, and defendant, Rice, was appointed administrator of his estate. In April, 1840, Carroll filed his bill in this Court against Rice, the administrator, Catharine C. Sargeant, the widow, and Lucius Lyon Sargeant, the only child, and heir at law, a minor under the age of twenty-one years, to have the sale of July twenty-eighth rescinded, and the securities given for the purchase money delivered up and cancelled, and to be repaid with interest what he had paid toward the purchase, on the ground of fraud in Sargeant, in misrepresenting the condition and [376]*376situation of the property at the time of the purchase; Carroll offering to account for all sales made by him.

The bill alleges, Sargeant misrepresented the property, in the following particulars, to induce complainant to purchase it.

First. The depth of the water in Grand River both above and below the Rapids, at which point the village of Kent is situated, and the facilities the river afforded for navigation.

Second. That the river did not overflow its banks at the village, in the time of freshet.

Third. The cost of completing the canal, which was in an unfinished state, and which, when completed as laid down on the village plat, was to extend from the head to the foot of-the. Rapids.

Fourth. The average head and fall of the water power that would be created by the canal, which he represented to be twelve feet.

Fifth. The amount of moneys due on contracts, for village property sold.

Sixth. The effect of the delivering up of a contract to John P. Calder, executing to him a deed, and taking back a mortgage, which was done by Sargeant, had upon the interests or rights of complainant.

Seventh. The quantity of building materials that had been provided for building a mill and tavern house, the progress that had been made in framing, what is called by the witnesses, the mammoth mill, and that machinery for it, to a large amount, had been ordered and paid for.

Eighth. The interest he had in two islands in Grand River, to which he said he had a good title, and which were a part of the property purchased by Carroll.

Other misrepresentations are also alleged in the bill, relative to the property being unincumbered; relative to steam[377]*377boat stocks; to the building of steamboats to run to and from the village; to the location of a land office at the village by the United States government; to a mail contract, and the like.

The bill further states a failure of title to a saw-mill and water power, conveyed in connection with, and as appertaining to lot number one, on the Campau plat. It also charges a mistake in drawing the deed conveying the real estate, in describing the interest conveyed in lot number twenty-five, on what is called the lower fraction, to be an undivided half, instead of the whole of said lot.

It is seldom a case so complicated in its details, and in which so little regard has been had to common honesty and fair dealing, if we take complainant’s bill to be true in all its parts, is presented to a court of equity for adjudication. It also strikes the mind as not a little singular, that complainant should have lain by nearly four years, before filing his bill. I can account for the delay only in this wise: Supposing he had made a good bargain, he was

Unwilling to relinquish it, on account of the fraud, until the change in the times had stripped the property of its fictitious value, and turned what at first appeared tobe a Very good bargain, into a very hard one.

Fraud vitiates all contracts, at the election of the party injured; but he must make his election on the discovery of it, or within a reasonable time thereafter, whether he will rescind the contract, or consider it a good and subsisting contract, and seek redress for the injury he has sustained by an action on the case for the deceit. The injured party may pursue either course, on the discovery of the fraud, provided the property is in a situation to be restored to the vendor, in the condition it was in when he parted with it, or the change that has taken place, if any, has arisen from the use of the property, and is too slight of itself to [378]*378materially affect its value. If the change is so great that the parties cannot substantially be placed back where they were before the sale, the vendee must seek redress by an action on the case for his damages.

In Boyce's Executors v. Grundy, 3 Pet. R. 215, Mr. Justice Johnson, who delivered the opinion of the court, says : “ That a party is bound to be prompt in communicating the fraud when discovered, and consistent in his notice to the opposite party of the use he proposes to make of the discovery, cannot be questioned.” And, in Jones v. Disbrow, the principle so clearly laid down by Mr. Justice Johnson was recognized in this Court, by Chancellor Farnsworth. Harr. Ch. R. 102. It is in itself so reasonable, the injured party, having two remedies, either of which he may pursue, but not both, and it so strongly commends itself to the common sense of every man, as to need no labored argument in its support. The difficulty, as is the case with most legal principles, consists in its application; and the circumstances of each case must furnish the Court with a key for that purpose.

In Jones v. Hisbrow, but a few months had elapsed after the discovery of the fraud, before steps were taken to rescind the contract; and yet the Chancellor in that case said, Disbrow should at once, on the discovery of the fraud, have given notice of his intention to recede from the contract. In the present case, assuming the several charges of fraud to be fully made out by the testimony, not only months, but years, were allowed to pass, after complainant was chargeable with notice of most, if not all the frauds of which he complains, before any steps were taken to rescind the contract. The first steps were to file his bill in this Court. This was the first notice defendants had of the alleged frauds, and of complainant’s intention to rescind the contract. Sargeant did not die until Sep[379]

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Bluebook (online)
1 Walk. Ch. 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-rice-michchanct-1844.