Chrysler v. . Canaday

90 N.Y. 272, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 376
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 90 N.Y. 272 (Chrysler v. . Canaday) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chrysler v. . Canaday, 90 N.Y. 272, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 376 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The most important questions which arise upon this appeal relate to the charge of the judge to the jury upon the trial, and to his refusals to charge several requests made by the counsel for the appellant, to each of which rulings an exception was taken.

The judge charged that if the defendant knowingly and willfully madé a false statement as to the value of the property which wag conveyed to the plaintiff, that the plaintiff can maintain this action.” He further stated that, if he, knowing them ” (the statements made) to be untrue, makes them with the intention of misleading the vendee, and if the latter, relying upon them, is misled to his injury, he may avoid the contract or recover damages for the injury.” The rule stated was repeated in substance in language of a similar import, and several requests to charge were made and refused, embodying a contrary proposition and relating to statements made as to specific portions of the property sold, and also to the effect that when the property is seen and examined by a person negotiating for the purchase or exchange, he must rely upon his own judgment and opinion as to the value and worth, and has no right to rely upon the statement of the person offering the same for sale or exchange.* Some other requests to charge were also made and refused which involved the same principle.

The charge as made, and the refusals to charge to which exceptions were severally taken, may properly be considered as presenting the point as to the nature, extent and character of the liability which is assumed by a vendor in entering into a contract with a vendee for the sale of real estate which the latter has seen, partially examined, but the value of which is far less than what is represented, and the representation is falsely made by the vendor for the purpose of obtaining a higher price for the property, and it is purchased by the vendee after his ex- *277 animation, in reliance upon the correctness of the statements made.

The questions presented by the exceptions to the charge as made and the refusals of the judge to charge as requested are not unfamiliar to the courts of this State and have been the subject of frequent consideration. In Simar v. Ganada/y (53 1ST. T. 298; 13 Am. Hep.. 523), a leading case, an action was brought to recover damages for a fraud alleged to have been committed upon the sale of real estate by inducing the plaintiff to convey to the defendant certain other real' estate, for which the plaintiff agreed to receive in part payment certain bonds and mortgages which were alleged to be worthless. In the opinion of the court by Folger, J., the question was considered whether the statements made by the defendant were mere matters of opinion and belief, and it is there laid down that, if they were such, no liability is created by the utterance of them; but all statements as to the value of property are not such. They may be, under certain circumstances, affirmations of fact.” When known to the utterer to be untrue, if made with the intention of misleading the vendee, if he does rely upon them and is misled to his injury, they avoid the eont/raet. (Stebbins v. Eddy, 4 Mason, 414-423.) And where they are fraudulently made of particulars in relation to the estate which the vendee has not equal means of knowing, and where he is induced to forbear inquiries which he would otherwise have made, and damage ensues, the party guilty of the fraud will be liable for the damages sustained.”

These remarks must be considered in the light of the facts appearing in the case cited, and an examination of the record shows that there was evidence that the mortgages taken in exchange for the land sold were upon land located at a distance, which the plaintiff had not seen, and as to the value of which he knew nothing; that although the plaintiff proposed and the defendant agreed to go and see it, and several appointments were made for that purpose, the defendant did not fulfill and finally told the plaintiff that it was not necessary for him to go and examine the land, that he could take his word for it that it was just as he said.

*278 There was also testimony showing that the defendant made representations as to the former and the then existing condition of the land, what it had previously sold for, and its value, which were alleged to be false. It will thus be seen that there was proof tending to establish that the defendant fraudulently attempted to induce the plaintiff to refrain from examining the land himself and place reliance upon the defendant’s statements as to its condition and value, and hence what was said by the learned judge had reference to this element in the case. While, therefore, the general rule is laid down as to statements made which were known to be untrue, it is qualified and restricted where the vendee has not equal means of knowledge, and where he is induced to forbear inquiries which he otherwise would have made. That this is a correct interpretation of the opinion in. the case cited is supported by the decision of this court in the subsequent case of Ellis v. Andrews (56 N. Y. 83; 15 Am. Rep. 379), where it is held that a false statement of the value of property by the vendor, made for the purpose of obtaining a higher price than he knew it was worth, will not sustain an action- for fraud by the purchaser, who contracts relying upon such statement. ■ It is laid down in the opinion by Grover, J., that upon the question of value the purchaser must rely upon his own judgment, but in regard to any extrinsic fact affecting the quality or value of the subject of the contract, he may rely upon the assurances of the vendor, and if he does so rely and those assurances are fraudulently made to induce him to make the contract, he may maintain an action for the injury sustained. In Simar v. Canaday inducements were held out which may have prevented the plaintiff from examining the property and caused him to rely upon the word of the defendant, and if they were fraudulent the action could properly be upheld upon that ground.

If, in the case at bar, the evidence introduced established that the plaintiff was, by the artifice or fraud of the defendant, induced to refrain from an examination of the property, and relied upon the assurances made to him, the action upon that ground could be upheld.

*279 We are unable to discover any conflict between Simar v. Canaday and Ellis v. Andrews, and we think that the two eases upon principle are entirely reconcilable. Nor is it apparent that the rule laid down in the latter case is inconsistent with any of the decisions of this court cited by the respondent’s counsel, all of which have been carefully examined and considered.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.Y. 272, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chrysler-v-canaday-ny-1882.