Henning v. Kyle

56 S.E.2d 67, 190 Va. 247, 1949 Va. LEXIS 280
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 21, 1949
DocketRecord 3536
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 56 S.E.2d 67 (Henning v. Kyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henning v. Kyle, 56 S.E.2d 67, 190 Va. 247, 1949 Va. LEXIS 280 (Va. 1949).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Betty K. Kyle and Z. T. Kyle, plaintiffs below and here ■so designated, instituted this action against Ruth S. Henning,who will be hereinafter referred to as defendant. They claimed damages for alleged breach of contract because of defendant’s refusal to pay for certain real estate that she had agreed to purchase from them. Two jury trials were had. On the first, a verdict was returned substantially in favor of defendant. It is in the following words and figures:

“We the jury on the issue joined, find for the defendant but agree that she should forfeit her deposit of $705.00, and be required to pay $600.00 rental for time of occupancy of 1602 Cedar Lane.”

On motion of plaintiffs, that finding was set aside and a new trial awarded. It resulted in a verdict of $4,415 in their favor. From judgment entered thereon, this writ of error was granted defendant.

At the outset and before we examine any proceedings had upon the second trial, it becomes necessary to ascertain whether the court erred in vacating the first verdict.

*250 It appears from the record that defendant agreed to purchase from plaintiffs for $17,750, their home known as 1602 Cedar Lane. After viewing and fully inspecting the interior and making a partial inspection of the exterior of the residence, defendant executed a written contract of purchase and paid down the sum of $705. She took possession of and occupied the premises for about six months, but finally refused to make further payment and moved out. The property was then sold by plaintiffs to another for $13,500, that being the best price obtainable. Plaintiffs thereafter sued defendant for damages sustained due to her refusal to., fulfill the contract.

The defense asserted to the action was that plaintiffs and their agent had induced defendant to sign the contract of purchase by fraudulent representation of material facts. She denied all liability and, by way of a special plea of set-off, sought return of the $705 paid by her.

Plaintiffs contend that one of the instructions given on the first trial was erroneous because it submitted to the jury non-factual and immaterial issues and directed a finding in favor of defendant if she prevailed on any of those inconsequential matters. They also insist that the verdict is fatally defective in substance and form. For these reasons they say it was properly set aside and a new trial awarded.

Defendant says that the jury were properly instructed and their verdict was a finding in her favor on the chief issue, which was whether or not she had been induced to execute the contract as a result of fraudulent representation of material facts. She insists that the trial court should have entered judgment upon that favorable finding for her on- the main question presented. So much of the verdict as forfeits defendant’s payment of $705 and charges her with rent for the use of the premises, she says, ought to have been set aside and a judgment for the $705 entered against plaintiffs. She urges that such action now be taken by this court.

Instruction No. 6, complained of by plaintiffs, reads:

“The Court instructs the jury that if a seller or his agent *251 makes a positive statement of fact as to the condition of real estate to a prospective purchaser, and the purchaser relies entirely upon such representations, there is no duty on the purchaser to disbelieve such representations or to make a separate investigation of her own, if the seller was in a better position to know the condition than the purchaser. If such representations of fact are made by the seller or by the seller’s agent and the misrepresentation is of a material fact of importance, which might ordinarily have caused the purchaser to hesitate before agreeing to such purchase, upon discovering the falsity of such representations the purchaser has the right to withdraw from the contract, provided there is no undue delay in doing so.
“If the jury should find from the evidence that Mrs. Kyle, one of the owners, or Mr. Franklin, the real estate agent representing Mrs. Kyle, told the defendant, Mrs. Henning, that the house was in good condition, that the roof did not leak, that there was nothing wrong with the plumbing, and that the heating system was in perfect condition, that the house in question was built about 1939 or 1940, of pre-war materials, and was an exceptionally good value ■for the money, and if you should further find from the evidence that any or all of these representations were untrue, that the plaintiffs had lived in the house, that Mrs. Henning relied on such representations and signed the contract to purchase in the belief that such representations were true, and if you further find from a preponderance of the evidence that in addition to the falsity of the specific statements as to the leaking condition of the house, the plumbing, or the defective condition of the heating system, that a serious and expensive defect exists in the brick wall, structure or foundation of the house, your verdict should be in favor of defendant, Mrs. Henning.” ' (Emphasis added.)

The brief statement of that part of the evidence heretofore recited which discloses that there was an inspection and view of the premises by the purchaser before she executed the contract is sufficient upon which to determine *252 that the instruction was unwarranted and should not have been given.

It is a finding instruction and aside from being poorly phrased, much involved, and in the first paragraph assuming to be true matter not sustained by the evidence, it, without more, allows and directs the jury to treat and consider statements alleged to have been made to defendant by plaintiffs or their agent to the effect that the “house was in good condition” and that it was “an exceptionally good value for the money” as definite representations of material facts justifying rescission of the contract, whereas such statements usually measure up to nothing more than what is commonly considered “puffing” or “dealers’ talk.”

We find in 37 C. J. S., “Fraud”, sec. 13, at p. 241:

“Mere commendatory statements, or ‘dealers’ talk,’ ‘trade talk,’ or ‘puffing,’ do not constitute fraud, because these are generally regarded as mere expressions of opinion which cannot rightfully be relied on, at least where the parties deal on equal terms. The foregoing rules, however, are inapplicable where the speaker transcends the limits of puffing and makes his misrepresentations as statements of fact.”

Though the defendant had made her own inspection of the premises, the jury was told that if those two phrases or either of them were actually or in effect used by the agent or the owner in attempting to make the sale and were untrue and relied upon by defendant, then a finding should be made in her favor. This was error.

Phrases or statements of that nature concerning the character, condition or worth of real estate though voiced for the purpose of impressing the prospective purchaser partake of and are usually recognized as being expressions of opinion rather than of material facts. 55 Am.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E.2d 67, 190 Va. 247, 1949 Va. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henning-v-kyle-va-1949.