Iler v. Jennings

68 S.E. 1041, 87 S.C. 87, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 3, 1910
Docket7677
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 1041 (Iler v. Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iler v. Jennings, 68 S.E. 1041, 87 S.C. 87, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 100 (S.C. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

*89 Mr. Chief Justice JoNES.

This suit was brought 'to recover damages for breach of warranty in the sale by defendant to plaintiff of thirty-five shares of the capital stock of the Gambrell Hardware Company, and was tried before Hon. C. C. Featherstone, special Judge and a jury, at Greenwood, S. C., resulting in a verdict for defendant.

The complaint alleged substantially that on the 36th day of October 1907 and prior thereto the defendant, Jennings, was a director in the Gambrell Hardware Company, a corporation under the laws of this State and doing business at Greenwood, S. C., and was actively employed in the business.

That on October 26, 1907 plaintiff purchased of defendant thirty shares of the capital stock of the Gambrell Hardware Company of the par value of one hundred dollars per share, paying therefor thirty-nine hundred dollars. That at the time of said purchase defendant represented to plaintiff that the assets of the corporation on April 1, 1907 were as follows:

Accounts due $4,418.39; Farmers Warehouse stock $100.00; cash on hand $87.51; merchandise stock on hand $24,850.09. Total assets $29,455.99

And its liabilities on that day were as follows :

Capital stock paid in $15,700.00; Farmers and Merchants Bank over draft $752.30; bills payable $5,416.41; due on merchandise $4,490.05; gain net $3,097.23 — $29,455.09.

That defendant represented to the plaintiff that the condition of the corporation was better at the time of the negotiation than on April 1, 1907.

The said representations were made for the purpose of effecting a sale of said stock to plaintiff; that plaintiff relied thereon and was thereby induced to purchase and did purchase said stock. That instead of said corporation having a surplus of over three thousand at the time of the purchase as represented, there was a deficit of about six thousand dollars and that said representations were untrue and mis *90 leading. That said representations were an “express warranty” by defendant to plaintiff that the condition of the said corporation and its assets and liabilities were as represented. That at the time of said representations defendant was a director in said corporation and actively engaged in the management of its business and knew or ought to have known the condition of said corporation and plaintiff relying upon defendant’s means of knowledge and said representations was induced to purchase said stock. t That immediately before the purchase and sale of said stock, pending the negotiations for the same, the defendant expressly warranted the value of the stock and the condition of the said corporation. That the conditions of said warranty have been broken and plaintiff has suffered damage on account thereof in the sum of two thousand dollars. That upon discovery that said representations were untrue plaintiff offered to return said stock and demanded a return of the purchase price and that the sale be rescinded and that defendant refused.

One of the questions raised by appellant is as to the nature of the action. We are satisfied with the ruling of the Circuit Court that it is an action upon an express warranty. This is manifest from the language of the complaint. Moreover, the record shows that when the Court inquired of counsel for plaintiff whether the suit was for breach of an express warranty, counsel answered: “Yes, sir; and the misrepresentations of a director in this concern as to the condition of the concern at the time the plaintiff bought the stock — that is actual'misrepresentations. We don’t charge that Mr. Jennings did it intentionally or wilfully, but we take the position that where a man is in that position — any man- — and makes a statement as being true, he must know it is true.”

This was not an action based upon fraud or deceit, nor an action upon an implied warranty, and the Court correctly restricted the issues on the trial and in his charge to the case *91 as one upon an express warranty. Hence all exceptions based upon any other theory of the case are not well taken.

In Bryce v. Parker, 11 S. C. 337, the Court quotes with approval from 1 Pars, on Contracts 580;

“Any distinct assertion or affirmation of quality made by the owner during a negotiation for the sale of a chattel which it may be supposed was intended to cause the sale and was operative in causing it will be regarded either as implying or constituting a warranty;” and again, “It is certain that the word warrant need not be used, nor any other of precisely the same meaning. It is enough if the words actually used import an undertaking on the part of the owner that the chattel is what it is represented to be or an equivalent to such undertaking.”

In Shippen v. Bowen, 122 U. S. 581, the Supreme Court of the United States declared that “an affirmation of the quality or condition of the thing sold (not uttered as matter of opinion or belief) made by the seller at the time of sale for the purpose of assuring the buyer of the truth of the facts affirmed, and inducing him to make the purchase if so received and relied on by the purchaser is an express warranty.” It is a well settled rule that in actions upon an express warranty it is not necessary to allege or prove a scienter. Hence in considering this case, if defendant made any direct affirmation as to the quality or condition of stock sold by him, which were untrue, it may be assumed that he was ignorant of the falsity, and honestly believed the statement to be true.

With this preliminary we proceed to consider what we regard the vital questions presented by the exceptions.

The Court instructed the jury; “If Mr. Jennings here did not warrant that stock,' if he simply referred Mr. Iler to the bookkeeper to get a statement, and Mr. Iler got that statement and bought upon his own hook, why, Mr. Jennings is not liable for it;” and again in' response to defendant’s request the Court instructed the jury as follows :

*92 “The plaintiff’s action is based upon an alleged express warranty by the defendant that the financial condition of the company at the time the plaintiff bought the stock was as alleged in the complaint. This he must prove to the satisfaction of the jury by the greater weight of' the evidence. If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant merely stated that the books of the company showed that condition, their verdict must be for the defendant.”

To which the Court added: “Now you see, gentlemen, right there it comes back to that question of warranty — what were these statements; what did they amount to; were they intended to be a statement that the statement was correct and did Mr. Iler act upon it?”

We do not think this modification or anything in the general charge operated to cure what we regard as erroneous in the instruction:

“If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant merely stated that the books of the company showed that condition their verdict must be for the defendant.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 1041, 87 S.C. 87, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iler-v-jennings-sc-1910.