Judy v. Jester

100 N.E. 15, 53 Ind. App. 74, 1912 Ind. App. LEXIS 286
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1912
DocketNo. 7,775
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 15 (Judy v. Jester) 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
Judy v. Jester, 100 N.E. 15, 53 Ind. App. 74, 1912 Ind. App. LEXIS 286 (Ind. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Felt, J.

— This is an action for damages, brought by appellees against appellant and one Isaac Alonzo Barkhurst for alleged fraud in the exchange of certain real estate. The complaint is in two paragraphs. A separate demurrer for want of facts was filed to each paragraph and overruled. Issues were joined by a general denial. Upon motion the cause was venued from the Tippecanoe Superior Court to the Clinton Circuit Court where the case was tried by the court. A special finding of facts was duly made and conclusions of law stated thereon in favor of appellees for $2,707; that appellee Elizabeth Jester had an inchoate interest in the Tippecanoe County real estate; also that the law was with said Barkhurst and that he have judgment against appellees for his costs. A motion for new trial was overruled; the court rendered judgment against appellant in favor of appellees and this appeal was prayed and granted.

The errors relied upon for reversal are: (1) The overruling of the demurrers to each paragraph of the complaint; (2) neither paragraph of the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against appellant; (3) error of the court in its conclusions of law; (4) the overruling of appellant’s motion for new trial. The complaint is ex[77]*77tremely long, and in substance charges in each paragraph, that appellees were husband and wife; that on November 9,1906, and prior thereto William P. Jester was the owner in fee simple of 117 acres of real estate in Tippecanoe County, Indiana, of the value of $100 per acre, on which there was a mortgage for $5,860; that at said time appellant, owned a large amount of land in Starke County, Indiana; that appellant for the purpose of cheating and defrauding said appellee out of said land in Tippecanoe County, pretended and represented to him, that said lands in Starke County were all first class agricultural lands, composed of black loam, with a clay subsoil, and suited to the raising of all kinds of grain; that in furtherance of his said scheme to cheat and defraud said Jester out of his land, appellant induced him to go to Starke County with him and when there took him upon a portion of his land which appeared to said Jester to be the kind of land represented to him by appellant; that before leaving said lands appellant expressed a desire to go to another tract, which he claimed to own, for the purpose of seeing some tenants living thereon, and invited Jester to go along, which he did; that while upon said last-mentioned tract of land appellant in furtherance of his scheme to cheat and defraud appellee out of his said lands called his attention to a small portion of the land in their immediate presence and said to him that said lands were the most fertile in all northern Indiana, and the entire tract of 210 acres, was similar to and as good as the land in their immediate presence, and was worth $75 per acre; that after leaving said lands and on their way back to the town of North Judson, Indiana, appellant proposed to trade his said 210 acres of land for the land of Jester in Tippecanoe County; that this was the first information of the desire or intention of appellant to trade said lands that appellee received; that in conversation with reference to said trade, appellant repeatedly represented said 210 acres to be first class land, fit in every particular for raising all kinds of grain; that all of it was as [78]*78good as that upon which they were at the time Jester’s attention was called to the soil; that appellant in furtherance of his scheme to cheat and defraud appellee proposed to sell him said 210 acres of real estate upon the following terms: appellee to assume and pay a mortgage thereon of $4,400 and to execute to appellant a purchase money mortgage upon said land for $5,129.75, due ten years after date, interest payable annually at six per cent; appellee, Jester, his wife joining him therein, to sell and convey, by warranty deed, to appellant his said lands in Tippecanoe County, subject to the mortgage thereon for $5,868. As a further consideration said Jester was to sell and deliver to appellant all his personal property at the time, upon his land in Tippecanoe County, except the com, of the value of $1,000; that appellée believed said representations to be true and relied upon the same, and being deceived thereby, entered into a written contract, on November 9, 1906, with appellant upon the terms aforesaid ; that the trade was thereafter carried out and warranty deeds executed as agreed by the parties, which appellees were induced to execute by the fraud of appellant aforesaid; that between the date of said contract and the execution of the deeds, appellee had no opportunity to examine said lands which were situate about 70 miles from his home; that he relied upon and believed said representations made by appellant to be trae with reference to the character and value of said land; that in truth and in fact at the time said contract was made and the deeds executed, said Starke County lands were not worth over $10 per acre; that the soil was not fit and suitable for agricultural purposes as represented by appellant and was not over the entire tract as shown to appellee at the place and time they visited the farm, and there was not over two or three acres of such soil; that the remainder of the 210 acres was practically worthless for agricultural purposes, was composed of quicksand, there was no clay subsoil and no black loam on top as represented by appellant; that appellee Jester was not aware of said fraud [79]*79practiced upon him until some weeks after the trade had been consummated, and not until he went to the place in the winter of 1906 with a gentleman who desired to rent the farm; that he immediately thereafter called upon appellant and demanded of him a rescission of the contract and a reconveyance of said properties, which demand was refused by him; that at this, time appellant said he would aid and assist appellee in making a good trade of the Starke County lands; that appellant conspired with one Alonzo Barkburst to further cheat and defraud appellee, by obtaining from bim, said Starke County lands at a time when said Jester was in a distressed state of mind by reason of bis disappointment occasioned by tbe fraud already practiced upon bim by appellant; that for tbe purpose of carrying out bis design to defraud appellees out of said lands in Starke County, appellant transferred four town lots to one.Courtwright, tbe said Courtwrigbt pretending to exchange said town lots for five tracts of land in Georgia, containing in all 2,450 acres; that in order to conceal bis identity in tbe transaction, appellant caused tbe deed for tbe lands in Georgia to be executed to Alonzo Barkburst and appellant then caused Barkburst to approach'Jester and propose a trade of said Georgia lands for bis Starke County farm; that said Barkburst bad no interest in said land but was acting for and on behalf of appellant, and so acting did approach appellee and represented that tbe Georgia land was worth $10 per acre and that tbe title was good in bim, and presented an abstract, wbicb did show title as represented; that appellant offered to assist appellee in said trade and examined said abstract and pronounced tbe title good, and representing that be was a friend to appellee, advised bim to make tbe trade, and said be was well acquainted with tbe men wbo bad conveyed tbe land to Barkburst and that in bis opinion it was an elegant trade to make; that be bad some knowledge of tbe land in Georgia; that appellee relied upon said statements and representations of appellant and said Barkburst and believed them to be [80]

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Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 15, 53 Ind. App. 74, 1912 Ind. App. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judy-v-jester-indctapp-1912.