Corley v. Reed

145 So. 241, 164 Miss. 678, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 235
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1933
DocketNo. 30198.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 145 So. 241 (Corley v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corley v. Reed, 145 So. 241, 164 Miss. 678, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 235 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

*684 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Rescission and cancellation are sought by the bill in equity filed by J. H. and A. H. Reed, the appellees herein, against W. D. Corley, the appellant, because of certain material false representations therein alleged to have been made to them by ~W. D. Corley, whereby they were induced to purchase a section and a half of land, or nine hundred and sixty acres more or less, for a recited consideration of sixty-two thousand, four hundred and ninety-five dollars, none of which was in cash; the consideration being deferred payments and the assumption of a federal loan bank mortgage amounting to twenty *685 thousand dollars by the Reeds. The false representations were denied in the answer of the appellant, W. D. Corley.

On the trial of the case, the following facts, which are material to state, developed: A short time prior to December 1, 1929, the appellees, the Reeds, approached the appellant, Corley, in Tutwiler, seeking to rent from him his plantation. They lived on and owned the adjoining plantation to Corley’s, called “Gulley’s Deadening Place,” but the appellant, Corley, did not live there, had never done so, but had resided in Colorado. Corley declined to rent his place but told the Reeds that he would sell it to them on easy terms. There were some negotiations, and in one interview with the appellant the Reeds said that he told them: (1) That the boundary of the west side, and especially the northwest corner, was in a designated place; (2) that the lands were well drained; and (3) that there were more than six hundred acres in cultivation on the place. In a conversation Corley stated to the Reeds that they knew more about how much land was in cultivation than he did, as they lived adjoining his place. He further stated to them that they could see the manager of his place, Howell, and go over the land and “see for themselves.” The elder Reed went upon the place and made a slight examination. A short time thereafter his son, A. H. Reed, went over the place extensively with the appellant’s manager, Howell, and, from the record, made a fairly thorough investigation thereof. After an examination of the place, pursuant to an agreement, the parties met in a lawyer’s office to execute the necessary papers to close the transaction, but during this transaction a disagreement arose as to whether the Reeds were to pay certain interest due in February,, thereupon Corley declined to consider the matter further and left the office. Afterwards the Reeds went to Tutwiler, where they’met the son-in-law of Corley, and they decided “to go back and make the trade.” *686 They said that Corley repeated the statement that “there was better than six hundred aeres ofTand in cultivation on the plantation.” Finally, the contract was fully executed by them about December 2, 1929.

The Reeds immediately went upon the plantation and began farming operations for the following year, and very shortly afterwards began clearing land. They did not discover there was any shortage in the cultivated land until November or December of the following year, about the time Corley began to press them for payment of the first note due by them to him. When the note was not paid by them, Corley thereupon caused the lands to be advertised and sold by the trustee on December 26, 1930, at a time when the lands had substantially declined in value.

J. H. Reed stated that he did not suspect there was any shortage in the cultivated' lands until the crops turned out to be • short. Both appellant and appellees had surveys of the land made. The surveyor for the Reeds testified that at the time the Reeds went into possession there were only about four hundred and fifty-seven acres of land in cultivation, in which statement the Reeds concurred. Oin the other hand, the surveyor employed by Corley estimated that there were in cultivation, at the time of the execution of the deed, more than six hundred acres of land. There is no evidence that the boundaries of the plantation were not as pointed out,- and there was no ground upon which to base th¿ decree of the court below in favor of the Reeds’ canceling and rescinding the entire contract and all papers executed between the parties, except upon the representation that there were more than six hundred acres of land in cultivation.

Adopting the theory that there were only four hundred and fifty-seven acres of land in cultivation at the time of the execution of the deed, and that, under the circumstances, the representation was a material one of fact, *687 and not of opinion, though we do not expressly so decide, may the executed contracts be rescinded and canceled under the facts of this case?

It distinctly appears from the evidence of the Reeds that Corley told them they knew more about the acreage on the place than he did; that there were more than six hundred acres in cultivation; and that they could see his plantation manager, Howell, and go over the place themselves. And in pursuance of this permission, they did, before closing the trade, go upon the plantation and make such investigation as they thought proper. It was certainly not a cursory investigation. Also, it was certain, in the first instance, that the Reeds wanted to rent the place from Corley, and desired to rent five or six hundred acres of land. With that in view, and the fact that when they went upon the place they' were investigating with the idea of purchasing same, the inspection made by the younger Reed was not a mere cursory investigation. We must also say that experienced farmers —as they were — when looking at a plantation in the Mississippi Delta, consisting of level lands, should have no difficulty in making up their minds as to the amount of acreage in cultivation and the amount in woodland. The Reeds now say that there were one hundred and fifty acres less in cultivation than represented; so that the evidence warrants the statement that before entering the contract, Reed and his son actually went upon the plantation and saw it themselves, which was the proper manner of ascertaining the truth as to the amount of the acreage; and they had an opportunity there to fully verify or falsify the statements which they testified had been made by Corley to them, and upon which they testified that they relied implicitly in making this contract.

Under these circumstances, we are of opinion that the appellees, the Reeds, were not entitled to a rescission and cancellation of their contract, even if we assume *688 that the representation was made and that it was false, although the evidence is in sharp conflict on every material point in the case, and the material evidence is confined to that of the parties to the litigation. True, the surveyors testified in accordance with their respective employers, but, after all, due to the fact that the Reeds began to clear land almost as soon as they went upon the plantation, each surveyor relied upon statements made to him by his respective employer as to what lands were cleared and not cleared at the time this, contract was made.

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 241, 164 Miss. 678, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corley-v-reed-miss-1933.