Fairchild v. . McMahon

34 N.E. 779, 139 N.Y. 290, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 495, 94 Sickels 290, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 999
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 34 N.E. 779 (Fairchild v. . McMahon) 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
Fairchild v. . McMahon, 34 N.E. 779, 139 N.Y. 290, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 495, 94 Sickels 290, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 999 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff sought to foreclose a mortgage assigned to her, before the commencement of the action, executed and delivered by the defendant, upon certain real estate of which she was the owner, subject to other mortgage liens, and bearing date April 30th, 1890, for $1,500, payable one year from date, with semi-annual interest. The mortgage was given to one Joseph II. Cain, with whom the negotiations *292 and transactions which resulted in its execution and delivery were had, or with agents acting for him or in his interest. The defense is fraud practiced upon the defendant, by means of which she was induced to make and deliver the mortgage and the accompanying bond. The facts to sustain this defense are stated with considerable detail, the substance of which, in brief, is as follows :

On the 9th of April, prior to the execution of the mortgage, the defendant, through her husband acting for her, entered into an agreement with Cain to exchange real estate. Each owned a house and lot incumbered by -.mortgage, the equity of redemption in which was to be conveyed to the other, and the agreement was actually carried out by the execution and delivery of proper conveyances. The mortgage in question was executed and delivered in pursuance of this agreement. It is alleged in substance that one Toran, the plaintiff’s son, was the principal actor in the transaction and the real party to be benefited. That though the record title to the real estate to be conveyed to the defendant was in Cain, yet his title was nominal, as his name was simply used by Toran in the purchase of the property and in the negotiations for its sale to the defendant and in the conveyance. It is then charged in substance that Toran, Cain and their broker, and another broker employed by and acting for the defendant’s husband, her agent, conspired together to cheat and defraud the defendant by false and fraudulent representations concerning the value and condition of the house which the defendant by the agreement was to receive in exchange for her property and which she subsequently conveyed, and that, in reliance upon the truth" of the statements, she, through her husband, entered into and executed the agreement and made the exchange. It is further averred that upon discovery of the fraud the defendant offered to rescind the whole transaction. The. courts below have sustained the defense, and the charges of fraud and other facts alleged by the defendant-arc found by the learned trial judge to be substantially true.' The testimony upon the issues of fact was very conflicting, but *293 after considering it with all the circumstances we are unable to say that any of the findings, material to the defense, and challenged by exception, are without support and, therefore, feel concluded by them as to the facts.

There are one or two questions of law, however, that should be noticed. One of the false representations made by Yoran and his broker to the defendant’s husband, as appeared from the findings, which was relied upon, and which influenced her action in making the exchange and giving the bond and mortgage in suit, and upon which the finding of fraud is based, was that the house and lot transferred to the defendant in the exchange, was worth $15,000. That Cain had just purchased it at the price of $12,000, from the executors of the deceased owners, who were compelled to sell at a price below the real value, and that such was the consideration expressed in the deed to him from the executors, as would appear from the record in the county clerk’s office.

It is further found that the defendant’s husband, before entering into the transaction, did examine the deed in the clerk’s office under which Cain took the title, and that it appeared from the same, that the consideration was $12,000, and that the defendant and her husband believed the statement. That while it was true that the consideration stated in the deed was $12,000, it was not true that the real consideration paid was that sum, but, on the contrary, the fact was that about twenty-four days before the transaction, Yoran had purchased the property for $7,000, which was its true value, and liad taken the deed in the name of Cain, expressing a fictitious consideration, for the purpose of deceiving investors, and that the defendant, had procured the consideration to be falsely stated in the deed. This finding raises the question whether a false statement, deliberately made, by a party about to sell property, to the party about to purchase it, with respect to the price which he had paid for it to a former owner, is a sufficient basis upon which to predicate a finding of fraud, when the statement is relied upon by the party to whom made.

It has been held that a false statement by a vendor to *294 a vendee concerning tlxe value of property about to he sold, will not sustain an action for fraud, but the vendee in such cases must rely on his own judgment. (Ellis v. Andrews, 56 N. Y. 83.)

' It may be that the rale in such cases would be different if the purchaser was prevented by any act or artifice of the seller from exercising his judgment in ascertaining the value.

But the question liei*e is not one arising out of a representation as to value. The representation was with l’espect to a fact which might, in the ordinary course of business, influence the action and control the judgment of the purchaser, namely, the price paid for the property about to be sold by the vendor, within less than a month prior to the transaction; and so, we think, that a false statement with respect to the price paid under such circumstances, which is intended to influence the purchaser, and does influence him, constitutes a sufficient basis for a finding of fraud.

It was so' held in Sandford, v. Handy (23 Wend. 260), where a new trial was granted to the plaintiff in an action of this charactei1, on the ground that proof of such representations was improperly excluded at the tidal. Oh. J. Yelson, delivering the opinion of the court (p. 269), said:

“ I am also inclined to think that any misrepresentation as to the actual cost of the property is a material fact, and naturally calculated to mislead the purchaser. * * * Misrep-
resentation as to the cost of an article stands somewhat on the same footing. It is a material fact, which not only tends to enchanee the value, but gives to it a firmness and effect beyond the force of mere opinion. ' -
The vendor is not bound to speak on the subject, but if he does, I think, he should speaJo the, truth.”

The same principle received the sanction of the court in Van Epps v. Harrison (5 Hill, 63), and is apparently recognized in Smith v. Countryman (30 N. Y. 655), Hammond v. Pennock (61 id. 151), and Goldenbergh v. Hoffman (69 id. 326).

There is another question in the case as to how far these statements as td the cost of the property made by a broker *295

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E. 779, 139 N.Y. 290, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 495, 94 Sickels 290, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairchild-v-mcmahon-ny-1893.