Croley v. Baker

371 S.W.2d 830, 237 Ark. 136, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 504
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 4, 1963
Docket5-3066
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 371 S.W.2d 830 (Croley v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Croley v. Baker, 371 S.W.2d 830, 237 Ark. 136, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 504 (Ark. 1963).

Opinion

Ed. F. McFaddin, Associate Justice.

The appellees, Mr. and Mrs. Baker, on the claim of false representations, sought to rescind their purchase of realty, and also to recover damages, from the appellants, Mr. and Mrs. Croley. In the complaint and in the trial i.n the Chancery Court there were a number of claimed misrepresentations relating to a variety of matters; but the Chancellor found that all of the alleged misrepresentations had been waived except the one as to the water supply for the house; and on that basis, alone, rescission and damages were awarded. On this appeal the only question relates to the representations regarding the water supply for the house.

Mr. and Mrs. Croley owned a farm of 80 acres in Carroll County which they listed for sale with the Strout Realty Company. In the listing which the landowners gave the said real estate broker there was this statement as regards the water situation for the house r1 “Number of wells, one; Depth, 125 feet; Dug or drilled, drilled; Pumping equipment, electric pressure. ’ ’ The real estate broker advertised the property for sale, and the advertisement2 said, as regards the water situation for the house: “Well for water; ...” Mr. and Mrs. Baker lived in Texas; he is an electronics engineer and she is a writer of books for children. The Bakers saw the advertisement of the Croley property, and on November 22, 1960, the Bakers visited the Strout Realty Company office in Eureka Springs, and Mrs. Andrews-Porter, an agent of the Strout Realty Company,'showed the Croley property to the Bakers. Here is Mrs. Baker’s testimony as to what Mrs. Andrews-Porter said to her about the water for the house:

“Q. Did Mrs. Porter tell you there was plenty of water in the well, or did Mrs. Porter tell you what you testified this morning?

“A. She said to try it and we tried it and there was no reason to believe there wasn’t.

“Q. You testified this morning you asked Mrs. Porter how much Avater was in the Avell and she said she didn’t know but to try it?

“A. We tried it and there seemed to be plenty of water in the well.

“Q. All right. Then she didn’t misrepresent that to you, did she ?

“A. -She didn’t know—”

Miss Barbara Hussey accompanied the Bakers on their inspection of the Croley house; and she testified as to what was said about the water situation in the house:

“Q. ... What inspection did they make concerning the water pump, related equipment?

“A. Mr. Baker asked her about the water supply, and where the water supply might come from and she took us outside the porch to a little shelter and I don’t know -whether there was a lock on it, I don’t recall, however, the roof was raised on it, and the pressure system was shown to Mr. and Mrs. Baker and myself, and consisted of a pump set in concrete, as she said must be over the well; and there was a small pressure tank, related hoses leading to it. And she also pointed out the large spring holding tank up just from the house. I don’t recall whether she pointed it out. I know we went up and looked at it later on. Mr. Baker looked for some time at the pump, and asked about it. He turned the switch on. We tried the facilities in the house. There was water.”

And on cross-examination Miss Hussey stated:

“Q. Now, as to the—as to the water supply, did she go any farther beyond the fact that she said when she was asked if there was plenty of water she said that she didn’t know, you would have to try it and see?

“A. That’s as far as she went.”

Mrs. Andrews-Porter, the agent for the Strout Realty Company, testified as to the inquiry and representations regarding the water situation for the house:

“Q. Did they ask you at that time anything about the water on the property?

“A. Specifically what water?

“Q. The well water.

“A. The well.

“Q. The water that was used in the house?

“A. They asked about the well, and I said the well was pure, as far as I know, it’s all right. We went in and they turned on the spigot and water ran out. They flushed the stool and they seemed to be well pleased with the way it operated and that was all that was said about it.”

Mr. Baker did not testify in the case; and the testimony of Mrs. Baker, Miss Hussey, and Mrs. Andrews-Porter, as above copied, together with the said listing and advertisement, constitute the entire representations concerning the water situation for the house. It was shown that the Bakers moved into the house on May 29, 1961; that the water supply in the house first became inadequate on June 28th; that work was done on the well then and again on July 25th; that the well “went dry” some thirteen times between June and October; that an engineer, Mr. Roy Downs, tested the well and said it would produce only 11.4 gallons per hour or 273.6 gallons for 24 hours. Mr. Downs, called as a witness by appellees, testified:

“A. The average amount used for a family of 4 would be somewhere around 250 or 300 gallons.

“Q. In a 24 hour period?

“A. In a 24 hour period.

“Q. If that is true, Mr. Downs, . . . and this well produced 11.4 gallons per hour, would not that yield, in 24 hours period 273.6 gallons? . . .

“A. Yes.”

Another witness, John Hadden, called by the appellees, testified:

“Q. John, you don’t know how deep that well is, do you?

“A. No, sir, I sure don’t.

“Q. And you don’t know how far off the bottom of that well that jet is?

“A. That’s what I said, Mr. Simpson, what McKinney reported back to me.

“Q. That’s all yon know is what somebody else reported ?

“A. That’s all I know.”

We have given the evidence in some detail to demonstrate that there is no testimony that the well toas other than as represented. Wherein was there a false representation as regards the water situation in the house? We fail to find any; and there must be a false representation in order to support a decree for rescission. In Hunt v. Davis, 98 Ark. 44, 135 S. W. 458, Mr. Justice Frauenthal stated the burden resting on one who sought a rescission of a contract on the claim of false representations :

“In order to charge the seller with fraud, it must be shown that he has made an active attempt to deceive the buyer relative to some matter material to the contract, either by statements which he knows to be false or by acts, conduct or representations which suppress the truth and induce in the buyer a false impression. Representations which are considered fraudulent in law must be of a nature that are material to the contract, and ‘must be made by one who either knows them to be false or else, not knowing, asserts them to be true, and made with the intent to have the other party act upon them to his injury, and such must be their effect.’ Louisiana Molasses Co., Ltd. v. Fort Smith Gro. Co., 73 Ark. 542.

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Bluebook (online)
371 S.W.2d 830, 237 Ark. 136, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/croley-v-baker-ark-1963.