Fountain Valley Land & Irrigation Co. v. Wagoner

147 P. 333, 59 Colo. 55
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1915
DocketNo. 7942
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 P. 333 (Fountain Valley Land & Irrigation Co. v. Wagoner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fountain Valley Land & Irrigation Co. v. Wagoner, 147 P. 333, 59 Colo. 55 (Colo. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hill

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in error brought this action to recover $2,500 paid to the plaintiff in error as a part of the purchase price for sixty acres of land and water purchased by him, from it, under contracts bearing date October the 21st, 1910, which he seeks to have cancelled, together with certain promissory notes given in part payment of the purchase price, etc., alleging that his execution of the contracts was procured through the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant, relied upon by him, etc. He alleges his previous offer and willingness to surrender possession and account for rents, etc. Trial was to the court, which found the issues in favor of the plaintiff, and entered its decree cancelling the contracts, and notes, and awarding to the plaintiff a money judgment for $1,898.56.

[57]*57It is urged that the complaint fails to state a cause of action, and that the court erred in overruling the demurrer which raises this question. For convenience we will refer to the parties as designated in the pleadings. The complaint alleges, in part, that the plaintiff’s execution of these contracts was secured through the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant, well known to it at the time the contracts were made, he, the plaintiff, relying thereon, etc. It sets forth in detail what these false and fraudulent representations consisted of, the greater part of which relates to facts, which, it is alleged, the defendant represented then existed,' to-wit, its clear- title to all of the land sold, its pondition as being free from ditches except those appertaining thereto, and the kind of water rights which it had, which were to go with the land under the water contract. We do not think the^eomplaint subject to demurrer in failing to state a cause of action,... Its allegation in this respect will be further considered'in''connection with the evidence which it is claimed is insufficient to support the findings.

It is urged that inasmuch as the land contract did not call for a deed to be furnishéd at the time it was executed, but only after half of the purchase price of $8,220 was paid, which, in .part, was to be in installments, that the allegations and proof of the false representations as to title are immaterial, even though true. Cases are cited which, it is ^alleged, sustain this conclusion. We do not think they go to this extent, or hold further than that a person in good faith, under certain circumstances, can contract to sell and deliver title in the future to lands which, at the time, he does not own, when he has 'a contract for its purchase or equitable grounds by which he is entitled to believe he will secure title before his grantee is to receive it, or for the sale of land on which there may be an incumbrance when he is,' or thinks he is, able and intends to have it removed before his grantee is entitled to receive his title; but that is not the question here; it is, was the plaintiff induced to [58]*58enter into this contract through the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant, and if so, and had he known the real facts, would he have entered into the contracts, and upon account of these false and fraudulent representations has he been, or will he be, injured to the extent that he is entitled to rescind.

The testimony is conclusive that at the time of the execution of the contracts the title to this land did not stand in the name of the defendant, but was in the name of W. C. Johnston; that there was a deed of trust upon this and other lands to secure his personal notes in the sum of $10,-000; that there also was a deed to Wilson brothers which had been previously executed by Johnston’s grantor, for a right of way for a ditch twenty-four feet wide, running diagonally through this land, consuming approximately 1.27 acres of land, which, under the contract, the defendant agreed to convey to the plaintiff clear. This right of way deed was not then recorded, but was filed for record on March 11th, 1910; possession had been taken, however, and the ditch constructed before the execution of the contracts to the plaintiff, who, in substance, testifies it was his understanding that this ditch was for the sole use of the land purchased by him. There is testimony to the effect that the defendant knew of this right of way being owned by the Wilsons at and before its execution of these contracts. At the trial, which was in May, 1912, Mr. McRay, who had deeded this and other lands to Johnston and took his notes for $10,000 as part of the purchase price, which was secured by a deed of trust thereon, states that there were three notes of- $3,833 each, dated February 14th, 1910, payable, respectively, October the 1st, 1910, 1911 and 1912, with interest; that Mr. Johnston was in default in his payments on the notes due October 1st, 1910, and 1911; that at the time of the trial he was owing on these two notes about $5,500 past due. This, with all of the third, would leave about $8,800 as a first lien upon the land. Witness states [59]*59that he had made demand on Johnston for the money, but had not got it; that Johnston told him he did not have the money to pay him; that he is the same McRay who conveyed the right of way for the ditch through this and other lands to the Wilsons in 1907, and that he received $500 for that conveyance; that he had had conversations with Johnston previous to the date of the contracts in issue concerning his, McRay’s, sale of this right of way; that is, as to its value, which had to Johnston’s knowledge been settled by a board of arbiters; that the ditch ran through the land when he eoñveyed it to Johnston; that Johnston had been over it, he supposed, about five hundred times before he bought it; that he had not extended the time of payment on any of these notes; that he had agreed he would, if $2,500 was paid, but it had not been paid;- that the only reason he knew why it had not been paid was what Johnston told him, viz.: that.he had not got the money; that he had no arrangement that he should release part's of this land on payment of a certain amount; that he was willing to accept his money; that he had contemplated renewing the last two •notes, also that he had threatened foreclosure. The plaintiff testified that he first . learned Wilsons owned the ditch when one of them rode up>v there in May, 1910, and told him they had a deed for a right of way through there; that this ditch cuts through the land some places four feet deep, and there are dams at-places; that he had to flume across it to irrigate the lower part of this place; that to cross it with a wagon he had to either dig a place and fill in, or build a bridge; that it impedes cultivation, cuts part of the land in a kind of a three-cornered-shape and makes it bad for plowing, seeding, cutting hay-, running ditches, etc.

It is admitted that the defendant promised to pay the 1910 taxes upon this land,, and that without this promise, in order to be in shape to be in a position to fulfill its contract -with the plaintiff, it 'would be required to do so. It is conceded that these taxes had not been paid at the time [60]*60of the trial in 1912. The defendant’s evidence' discloses that Mr. Johnston was its president at the time and ever since the execution of the contract with the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
147 P. 333, 59 Colo. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fountain-valley-land-irrigation-co-v-wagoner-colo-1915.