Haukland v. Muirhead

206 N.W. 549, 233 Mich. 390, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 773
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1925
DocketDocket No. 51.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 549 (Haukland v. Muirhead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haukland v. Muirhead, 206 N.W. 549, 233 Mich. 390, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 773 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

*393 Fellows, J.

(after stating the facts). We shall not discuss the assignments of error dealing with the admission and rejection of testimony. We find no reversible error in any of these rulings.

Defendants’ motion for a directed verdict was properly denied. If defendants represented that defendant Muirhead held the title to the premises when they all knew he did not, and plaintiffs relied and acted thereon, they are entitled to recover at least nominal damages. Stockham v. Cheney, 62 Mich. 10; Wegner v. Herkimer, 167 Mich. 587. Plaintiffs not having sought rescission, but, on the contrary, having affirmed, did not by a delay short of the statute of limitations lose their right to recover their damages in an action for fraud and deceit. Dayton v. Monroe, 47 Mich. 193.

If plaintiffs learned Muirhead did not have title and had defrauded them by representing that he had, common prudence justified them in withholding further payment to him until they could ascertain from the fee owner how much had been paid by him, whether he was in default and such other information as a prudent person who had been defrauded would seek before making further payments to the one who had defrauded him; they are not estopped from asserting the fraud because, after they discovered it, they *394 exercised common prudence and withheld payments until they had proper information. The question of whether there had been a compromise was at best a question for the jury. It was also: a question for the jury whether plaintiffs voluntarily left the premises or left because of the judgment of restitution.

This brings us to the important question in the case, that of damages. The trial judge instructed the jury:

“If your verdict is for plaintiffs, then- it will be for -you to determine from the evidence the amount of damages suffered by them. Plaintiffs in this suit claim damages for the loss of their interest in the farm premises. In considering what 'this is, you must first determine the fair market value of the premises from the evidence heard, and then deduct from such value whatever the plaintiffs owed on the farm under their contract with defendant Muirhead. This will give you the value of the plaintiffs’ interest therein, and your verdict, if it is for the plaintiffs, will be in whatever sum you find their interest to be, less whatever plaintiffs realized from the farm during the time they were in possession.”

Defendants’ counsel say this would be a proper instruction were this an action on a covenant but not proper in this action for fraud and deceit. We think it was appropriate to the instant case. Plaintiffs had not rescinded, they had affirmed. They were, therefore, entitled to recover their damages occasioned by the fraud, not what they parted with. Hammond v. Hannin, 21 Mich. 374 (4 Am. Rep. 490), involved the breach of an agreement to convey land where the vendor by reason of failure of his title was unable to perform. Mr. Justice Cooley, Who wrote for the court, thus states the general rule:

“There is no doubt that the instruction given by the court is correct as a general rule. Where a breach of contract occurs, the law aims to make compensation adequate to the real injury sustained, and to place the *395 injured party, so> far as money can do it, in the same position he would have occupied if the contract 'had been fulfilled. Sedgwick on Damages, 174; Robinson v. Harmon, 1 Exch. 855; Lock v. Furze, L. R., 1 C. P. 441; Hill v. Hobart, 16 Me. 164; Lewis v. Lee, 15 Ind. 499.
“And where the carrying out of the contract would have given one of the contracting parties the enjoyment of a particular thing, and he has lost it, the damages he will be entitled to are the value of that which he has lost. Ibid., and see Engel v. Fitch, L. R., 3 Q. B. 314.”

He then points out that an exception to the rule was engrafted by Flureau v. Thornhill, 2 Wm. Bl. 1078, and that other cases have followed. But at page 387 he points out that the exceptions apply where the vendor “is guilty of no fraud” and the syllabus thus summarizes the holding:

“Where a vendor in a contract for the sale of land acts in bad faith, the proper measure of damages is the value of the land at the time of the breach; but where the contract was made in good faith, and the vendor is unable to- perform it, the measure of damages will be the consideration money and interest, with, perhaps, the costs of investigating the title.”

The instant case is planted on the actual fraud of defendants, and the jury by their verdict has found them guilty of an actual fraud. In the recent case of Hamburger y. Berman, 203 Mich. 78, where the defendant had contracted to convey property he did not own, the doctrine of the Hammond Case was invoked but we held it was not applicable but that the case was controlled by Dikeman v. Arnold, 78 Mich. 455, and it was there held (quoting from the syllabus):

“The true measure of plaintiff’s damages was the amount lost through the failure of defendant to carry out his contract; the loss to be ascertained as of the date of the breach.”

*396 We there approved the rule laid down in 2 Sutherland on Damages (4th Ed.), p. 1988, which we again quote:

“If the person selling is in default — if he knew or should have known that 'he could not comply with his undertaking; if he, being an agent, contracted in his own name, depending on his principal to fulfill his contract merely because he had power to negotiate a sale; if he has only a contract of the owner to convey, or a bond for a deed; if his contract to sell requires the signature of his wife to bar an inchoate right of dower, or the consent of a third person to render his deed effectual; if he makes his contract without title in the expectation of subsequently being able to acquire it and is unable to fulfill by reason of causes so known, as the want of concurrence of other persons; or if he has title and refuses to convey, or disables himself from doing so by conveyance to another person, —in all such case he is beyond the reach of the principle of Flureau v. Thornhill and is liable to full compensatory damages, including those for the loss of the bargain.”

This is sustained by a long list of authoriti® cited in the foot-note. See, also, Dikemam, v. Arnold, 71 Mich. 656.

The perplexing question in the case grows out of the refusal of the court to' give the defendants’ seventh request.

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 549, 233 Mich. 390, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haukland-v-muirhead-mich-1925.