Coley Et Ux. v. Dore

1915 OK 1021, 156 P. 164, 56 Okla. 443, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 727
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 7, 1915
Docket5578
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1915 OK 1021 (Coley Et Ux. v. Dore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coley Et Ux. v. Dore, 1915 OK 1021, 156 P. 164, 56 Okla. 443, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 727 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

This appeal presents error from the superior court of Muskogee county. Plaintiffs in error, S. B. Coley and his wife, as plaintiffs below, brought this suit against P. J. Dore and his wife, as defendants, to obtain a rescission of a written contract, by *444 which - said plaintiffs traded certain city lots, farming lands, and notes to defendants in exchange for an electric light plant, owned by defendants and situated in the town of Westville, Okla. It whs sought to rescind the contract on the ground of fraudulent misrepresentations alleged to have been made by Dore in inducing and procuring the contract. Briefly stated, these misrepresentations were alleged to be: (1) Misrepresentation as to the aggregate value of the plant and of its net earning capacity; (2) that the defendants represented that - they had a contract with the city of Westville to do the pumping of the water to be used by the' municipality, and the inhabitants thereof, through which considerable revenue and profits would be derived, and that such representations were false. A voluminous record is presented, containing many pages of evidence; which includes the testimony of all the interested principals in the case; and after the evidence had been heard by the court, sitting as a chancellor, the court decided all the issues in favor of defendants, and made, and entered the following findings of fact and judgment :

“(1) That the plaintiffs have failed to establish the material allegations of their petition, relative to fraud, and have failed to show that the representations and statements made by the defendants to the plaintiffs in the negotiations of the contract in evidence were false and fraudulent as in said petition alleged.
“(2) That the statements of the defendants as to the value of the electric light plant did not amount to a material allegation of fact, and were not so intended or considered by the parties, but w-ere merely an expression of opinion, and that the valuation of such plant at $15,000 was fixed simply as a basis for the contemplated trade and *445 exchange of property, and that the same was made in good faith and without fraud.
“(3) That the plaintiffs failed to produce satisfactory evidence that the representations relative tó the expense of the operation of, and the income from, the said electric light plant were fraudulent or false, but that the evidence introduced shows that such representations were substantially true.
“(4) That the plaintiffs knew and understood at the time of the making of the contract in evidence, that the defendants had no contract with the town of Westville to pump the city water as alleged in the petition of the plaintiffs.
“(5) That as to any representations made by the defendants relative to such alleged contract with the town of Westville to pump the city water, the same were of such •a nature and character, and related to such a subject, that the plaintiffs would not have been justified in relying upon them.
“(6) That the plaintiffs did not rely, nor inform the defendants that they relied, upon the representations as to the value of the plant, the expense of operating the same and the income from said plant, but that the plaintiff S. B. Coley, acting for himself and as the agent of his co-plaintiff, personally made an investigation of the defendants’ property prior to the' execution of the contract, and that the plaintiffs were afforded an opportunity to make such investigation as full as they desired, and that in the making of said contract the said parties dealt at arm’s length with each other.
“(7) That relative to the rescission of the contract and the acts and conduct of the plaintiffs subsequent thereto, the court deems it unnecessary to make finy findings of fact,' in view of the above findings and conclusions herein reached.
“The court concludes and holds under the evidence. introduced that there is no equity in the petition of the *446 plaintiffs; that the relief prayed for therein should be denied, and that said petition should be dismissed — to all of which findings and conclusions the plaintiffs except. -
“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiffs take nothing by this suit; that the prayer of such petition be, and the same is hereby denied, and said cause be, and the same is, dismissed for want of equity, and that the defendants have judgment for their costs, for which let execution issue, to which judgment of the court the plaintiffs except.”

Numerous errors are assigned and set out in the brief; but, when boiled down, they all amount to an attack upon the findings of the court as not being sustained by the evidence, except in one particular, where complaint is made of the rejection of certain evidence offered by plaintiffs relative to a defect in the title of two of the lots conveyed with the light plant.

1. It has been settled by many decisions in this court, commencing with Schock v. Fish, 45 Okla. 12, 144 Pac. 584, that in a case of purely equitable cognizance, this court may review the evidence, and, where the same shows that the findings and judgment of the trial court are clearly against the weight of the evidence, will set the same aside and reverse the case. Success Realty Co. v. Trowbridge, 50 Okla. 402, 150 Pac. 898; Asher v. Doyle, 50 Okla. 460, 150 Pac. 878; Wimberly, Trustee, v. Winstock et al., 46 Okla. 645, 149 Pac. 238. This rule is invoked in this appeal, and under it we have examined, with care, the evidence produced at the trial, and from such examination, we are unable to say that its weight is contrary to the findings of the court. On the contrary, we think the court found in- accordance with the clear weight of the evidence. In cases requiring an examination of the evidence, it is *447 always more satisfactory to the court, as it probably is to counsel, to set out and analyze the same in the opinion; but it cannot be done here, without extending this opinion far beyond the limits ordinarily observed. However, to show the weakness of plaintiffs in error’s case, we may call attention briefly to some of their contentions: For instance, they complain seriously that defendants valued their property at $15,000 in trading it to plaintiffs for lands and lots, some of which defendants had never seen, yet plaintiffs went, with an experienced man, and examined the light plant, saw it all, ran the lines' used for the distribution of electric current, and therefore had every means of forming their own estimate and judgment of its value. Defendants’ estimate of value was a mere opinion, which they may have honestly entertained, but upon which plaintiffs had no right to rely to the exclusion of their own judgment and investigation, with examination of all the properties conveyed.

As to the representation as to the net earning capacity of the plant, it is not shown, by any proper or sufficient test, that the statements were not substantially correct.

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Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 1021, 156 P. 164, 56 Okla. 443, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coley-et-ux-v-dore-okla-1915.