Hiser v. Litchfield

154 N.E. 510, 87 Ind. App. 19, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 225
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 23, 1926
DocketNo. 12,457.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 N.E. 510 (Hiser v. Litchfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hiser v. Litchfield, 154 N.E. 510, 87 Ind. App. 19, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 225 (Ind. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

McMahan, C. J.

Appellee recovered judgment against appellants for damages which she alleges she sustained by reason of fraud alleged to have been committed in the exchange of certain real estate owned by her in Fort Wayne for a farm owned by appellants, and located in Pulaski county. There was a judgment in favor of appellee for $7,500. A demurrer was sustained to appellants’ counter-claim, and their motion for a new trial was overruled. These rulings are relied on for reversal.

Appellee in her complaint alleges that, on and prior *21 to November 10,1921, she was the owner of certain real estate in Fort Wayne of the value of $12,000; that appellants, for the purpose of cheating and defrauding her, fraudulently and falsely represented to her that they were the owners of a certain 120-acre farm in Pulaski county, which was fertile and well adapted to farming purposes; that the farm had only been rented the last previous six years, prior to which time, it had been farmed by the owner and was not run down; that it needed no drainage other than what was already there and that it produced good crops; that it would raise any kind of crops and fruit and was worth $100 an acre; that the ground was not leachy, did not have a sand or quicksand subsoil, but that the subsoil was clay and would retain moisture and fertility because of the clay subsoil, and proposed to exchange said farm for appellee’s property. That appellee was a widow living in Fort Wayne and unacquainted with the value, nature and character of land in Pulaski county; that she had no knowledge of the value of said farm on the date when the exchange was made; that she went with appellants in an automobile to see the farm and, when she proposed to walk over the farm, they induced her to ride, telling her she could see it as well from the automobile; that appellants had previously procured a neighbor to represent to her that the farm was a good one and was worth at least $100 an acre; that she did not know appellants had talked with such neighbor about making such representation, and that she was thereby thrown off her guard and lulled into a sense of security as to the representations made by appellants as to the value and character of the land. That she had no knowledge of, or means of knowing, the character of the subsoil, and, because of-appellants’ superior knowledge as to the character, kind, quality, fitness and value, believed the statements and representations of appellants to be true and by reason of *22 such reliance she was induced to exchange her' said property for said farm. That in the summer of 1922, she visited the farm and learned that the representations of appellants were false, in that the land was not fertile and adapted to farming purposes, but was run down, worn out and barren of fertility, and that, instead of having been rented for but six years, it had been rented seventeen years, was wet and insufficiently drained, had a quicksand subsoil, and would not produce good crops of any kind and was not worth to' exceed $5,000, all of which facts are alleged to have been known to appellants when they made such false statements to her, which were made for the purpose of inducing her to make said trade. That, upon learning the true facts, she offered to return the farm to appellants and demanded a reconveyance of the property she had conveyed to them.

Appellants answered in two paragraphs, the first being a general denial and the second, alleging that appellee took possession of the farm and farmed it during the summer of 1922, and knew all about the character and value of the land, and, after knowing all about its value and character, retained possession thereof until in October, 1922, and thereby ratified and affirmed the said exchange of land.

The counter-claim to which the demurrer was sustained, after alleging the owner-ship by the parties of the respective real estate, alleges, in substance, that on October 26, 1921, they entered into an agreement for the exchange of their property, wherein appellee agreed to assume and pay two mortgages on the farm, one for $2,500 and one of $1,000, and appellants agreed to assume and pay certain liens and claims on the Fort Wayne property in excess of $6,600. That in the deed from appellants to appellee for said farm, she agreed to assume and pay the said two mortgages; that the $1,000 became due January 1, 1922; that appellee failed to pay *23 the same; that the holder thereof commenced suit against appellee and appellants, obtained judgment against appellants on the note and decree against all of them foreclosing the mortgage; that appellee refused to pay the judgment; that the land was advertised for sale by the sheriff to satisfy the judgment and decree and failed to sell for want of bidders, and that appellants, in order to prevent a levy on and sale of other property owned by them, were, on December 21,1922, compelled to pay said judgment which with costs amounted to $1,080.81, for which they demanded judgment.

The first contention of appellants relates to the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to their counterclaim. Appellee, however, has filed a remittitur in this court of the full amount claimed by appellants in the counter-claim, with interest thereon from the date when appellants paid the judgment which is the foundation of their counter-claim, the amount so remitted being $1,080.12, with interest from and after December 21, 1922. Conceding, without so deciding, that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the counter-claim, that ruling, in view of the remittitur, has become harmless and not available as a reason for reversal.

Appellants say the court erred in permitting appellee and her son, Robert Litchfield, to testify that the value of appellee’s property at the time of the trade was $15,200. Appellee’s property which she was trading consisted of nine lots, on which was located the house in which she was living and on which she was then erecting another house. The first conversation between appellants and appellee concerning the exchange of property took place at the home of appellee. In this conversation, appellants told appellee the farm was of the value of $12,000 and was mortgaged for $3,500. Appellee told appellants what she was owing; *24 that her place was mortgaged for $3,448; that the cost of street and sidewalk improvements was $215; the cost of new furnaces $461.45, and that there would be $2,339 due the contractor on account of the new house. In this connection, appellee was asked the following question: “Was there anything else said in that conversation relative to this property., the farm down there or the property out on Maumee Avenue?” Appellants’ objection being overruled, she answered: “Well, my property was worth fifteen thousand two hundred dollars, and that one would be worth twelve thousand.” She was then asked: “And tell the jury by whom that was uttered, by you or Mr. Hiser?” Her answer was: “By Mr. Hiser; we talked together.” Appellants do not claim that the whole of the conversation between the parties was not competent. They assume the witnesses, over their objections, testified that appellee’s property was worth $15,200, when, as a matter of fact, they were not asked anything about its value and did not testify as to its value.

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Bluebook (online)
154 N.E. 510, 87 Ind. App. 19, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hiser-v-litchfield-indctapp-1926.