Conner v. Craig

216 F. 729, 132 C.C.A. 639, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 27, 1914
DocketNo. 1229
StatusPublished

This text of 216 F. 729 (Conner v. Craig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conner v. Craig, 216 F. 729, 132 C.C.A. 639, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1376 (4th Cir. 1914).

Opinions

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

[1] In 1875 the commissioner of school lands conveyed a tract of land in Nicholas county, W. Va., containing about 2,200 acres, to James S. Craig and John S. Conner as tenants in common. By written agreement dated July 6, 1907, Arden L. Craig and.John M. Wolverton, doing business as lawyers and dealers in real estate under the firm name of Craig & Wolverton, obtained from John S. Conner an option to purchase his one-half interest in the timber on the land at the price of $21,000, a little less than $20 an acre. By a similar instrument dated July 8, 1907, they obtained from James S’. Craig an option on his one-half interest in the timber at $40 an acre. On July 10, 1907, Craig & Wolverton agreed to sell the timber on the entire tract to Weston Lumber Company and Ernest G. Smith at $40 an acre. In pursuance of his option, on August 6th Conner conveyed by deed his interest in the timber to Craig & Wolverton; and on August 14th Craig & Wolverton and James S. Craig joined in a deed conveying the timber on the entire tract to Weston Dumber Company. On May 23, 1908, James S. Conner filed his bill, alleging that he had been induced to give the option on his interest and to make the conveyance to Craig & Wolverton at much less than its real value, by fraudulent concealment and. misrepresentation of James S. Craig and Craig & Wolverton, and that consequently he was entitled to share in the proceeds of the sale to Weston Dumber Company as if he had not conveyed to Craig & Wolverton and had been named as-a party in interest to the sale of the timber at $40 an acre. The defendants by their answers denied the allegations of fraud and' concealment, and set out in full their version of the relations of the parties and the negotiations which ended in the sale to Weston Dumber Company. Conner died during the pendency of the suit, and the cause was continued in the name of Bevietta B. Conner, his administratrix. Aft[731]*731er consideration of a great mass of evidence, including voluminous correspondence between the parties, the District Judge in a formal decree held that the plaintiff was not entitled to relief and dismissed the bill.

It is but just to say before entering upon a review of this finding that the evidence leads to the conclusion that James S. Craig, and A. I,. Craig, who acted for Craig & Wolverton, believed themselves to be acting within their legal rights in their transactions with Conner. But their belief cannot protect them if Conner suffered loss, by reason of their dealings with him, which courts of equity hold to be fraudulent in the sense that they were unfair. The books are full of cases in which bargains have been annulled because the parties acted on their own standards of right below the standards which courts of equity enforce. The conclusions of the district judge who tried the cause must always have great weight, but in this instance facts which seem decisive are not in dispute, and this court must draw from them its own conclusions.

The perspective will appear from a statement of the relations of the parties. John S..Conner was a jurist and afterwards a practising lawyer living in Cincinnati, Ohio, having little personal knowledge of the quantity and value of the timber. James S. Craig lived in West Virginia near the land, and, though he had not had it surveyed or the timber estimated, he had bought and sold similar property and was familiar with market values. For about 30 years he had the entire management of the land, paid taxes and other expenses, conducted suits involving the title, and in all respects acted for himself and for Conner. From time to time lie made statements of his accounts to Conner, and occasional adjustments were made. Although he and Conner seldom met, their relations were those of warm friendship, and Craig had voluntarily assumed toward Conner the position of a trusted agent and manager of the land. A. C. Craig was the son of James S. Craig, but he sustained no trust relation to Conner, and was of course free to deal with him at arm’s length and to buy his timber at the lowest price. In 1907 Conner was in failing health, and though not in financial distress needed money and was anxious to sell his interest in the timber if a fair price could be obtained.

The negotiations were opened by a letter from Craig & Wolverton to Conner dated March 23, 1907. Conner was in great perplexity as to the price and the wisdom of making a sale and sought advice and information from his friend and agent, James S. Craig. In responding to this call, Craig, except in two particulars, fully recognized and discharged his trust as the confidential adviser and agent of Conner. He told him in interviews and letters that he thought timber would advance in price, that he would not sell his own interest at the price offered, and that he expected at some time in the future to1 get $40 an acre for the timber on his share of the land. He reminded Conner of his embarrassment in advising him in reference to a trade with his own son, but promised to give him all the information he himself might have. He wrote on June. 18th, after mentioning a number of sales of similar timber at smaller prices,

[732]*732“still, In my own right and as your agent I am making written offers to close out our timber at forty dollars per acre and am having good hopes that I shall stagger on a man who can see that much in it for him and have the money to close at that price.”

Conner’s letters show that he regarded James S. Craig’s advice to be strong against the sale at the pirice proposed by Craig & Wolverton. Yet with all this James S. Craig failed in the trust he had undertaken in the concealment of two important facts from Conner: First, on June 17, 1907, James S. Craig, for himself and as agent of Conner, had given to Q. R. Squires an option running till July 2, 1907, to buy the entire timber at $40 an acre; and, second, on the same day he had promised to give Craig &. Wolverton an option on his one-half of the timber in case Squires should not comply. Failure to communicate the latter fact would be of little consequence but for its close connection with the concealment of the first. James S. Craig knew that Conner was in great perplexity as to his course, and as an intelligent business man he could not fail to see what an important factor in Conner’s consideration would be the knowledge that Squires, with faith in his ability to comply, had taken an option on the timber at twice the price he then had under consideration. Not only was the importance of this information manifest on its face, but the course of the transaction shows that both the Craigs regarded it of great moment. James S. Craig refused to bind himself to sell to his son while the Squires’ option was in force. His correspondence with Squires, his renewal of the option, although his son was complaining of his course towards him, and his testimony in this case indicate that he was hopeful of consummating a sale to Squirés. A. L. Craig regarded the Squires’ option so important that he wrote his father a letter, bitterly reproaching him for having given it, and in his testimony he says that after hearing of it, though he thought the price so excessive, a sale could not be made under it, and though he continued to write Judge Conner about allowing his firm to make a sale, yet he practically gave the matter up. It is. true Squires did not comply, but he testified he was confident of his ability to comply, but for lack of time.

Not only did James S. Craig and A. L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 F. 729, 132 C.C.A. 639, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conner-v-craig-ca4-1914.