King v. White

119 Ala. 429
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 119 Ala. 429 (King v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. White, 119 Ala. 429 (Ala. 1898).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

This was an action on the case instituted by appellant to recover for damages alleged to have resulted from a deceit and fraud' practiced upon him by appellees in the sale of a_ right to vend in the State of Georgia a cértain patented lock, of which defendant George was the patentee. Demurrers specifying many objections to the complaint Avere interposed by the defendant and sustained by the court, and plaintiff ■ declining to amend, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant, from which plaintiff appeals, assigning as error the judgment of .the court sustaining the demurrers. The complaint alleges, in substance, that defendants, George and White, unlawfully conspired and •agreed together to induce plaintiff to become a purchaser of the right to vend said patented lock in the State of Georgia, the scheme by which the object of the conspiracy was to be accomplished being, that- White was to propose to plaintiff to become a joint'purchaser with him-of said right for the purchase price of $400, one-half to be paid by White, and one-half by plaintiff; “but with the agreement between said White and George that said White Avas not to pay said $200; but Avas to receive an assignment of one-half of said patent right to •make sales of- said--patented article and county rights in ■the State-of Georgia for inducing plaintiff ■ to pay the . sum of $200 to said George f that ih- pursuance df this .unlawful..agreement,■ White- proposed1 to plaintiff to be[432]*432come a joint purchaser with him of said right at the price of $400, each to pay $200, and that plaintiff, relying upon, and influenced by, the facts that t'he purchase price was $400 and that White was to become a joint purchaser and pay one-half of this amount, .accepted the proposition and made the purchase, paying to George the sum of $200, his supposed share of the purchase price. Each of the six counts of the. complaint contains the substance of the above averments, some of them averring additional false representations made by White in urging the purchase, by which plaintiff was deceived, and that the' patented article was worthless as an article of commerce, and not salable, nor useful as a mechanical contrivance.

Even in the absence of these additional averments of false representations, we are of the opinion the complaint shows a good cause of action, and that the court below erred in sustaining the demurrers. The clear inference from the averments of the complaint is, that the purchase price of the right, or the piece at which George was willing to sell it, was $200; and the false representation by White that the purchase price was $400, — or the suppression of the fact that the right could be- purchased for $200 — and that he would become a joint purchaser and pay one-half the price, whereby plaintiff was induced to pay for an undivided one-half interest in the right a sum for which the whole interest could have been bought, was, in itself, without other misrepresentation, a fraud on plaintiff. — Grant v. Hardy, 33 Wis. 668; Bergeron v. Miles, 88 Wise. 397; Bostwick v. Lewis, 1 Day (Conn.) 250 (s. c. 2 Am. Dec. 73); Page v. Parker, 43 N. H. 363 (S. C. 80 Am. Dec. 172). The nature of the transaction was such that damage in law necessarily resulted from the fraud, whatever might have been t'he real value of the right purchased, and where fraud and damage unite a right of action is given to the person injured; and the fraud in this case having been effected by means of the alleged unlawful conspiracy and combination between White and George, the latter was equally responsible for its injurious results to plaintiff. While White and plaintiff contemplated becoming joint purchasers of t'he property, they stood in a relation of mutual trust and confidence towards each other that imposed on each the obligation to exercise the* same good [433]*433faith towards, and regard for the interests of, the .other, that is required in transactions of a like character between partners, or persons occupying fiduciary relations. Whatever advantage White had in the transaction by reason of his secret understanding with the vendor, he Avas bound to communicate to, and share Avith, plaintiff, and the suppression by him of the fact that the real price of the right was $200, instead of . $400, and that he Avas acting as the agent of the vendor, and Avas to receive an undiAdded half interest in the right for inducing the purchase by plaintiff of the other half, Avas a clear violation of his duty, and a betrayal of the trust and confidence AAdiich plaintiff had a right to repose in him, amounting to a constructive fraud. The general principle is stated by Lord Chelmsford, L. R. 2 ch. 55, in these Avords: “Whenever two persons stand in such a relation that, Avhile it continues, confidence is necessarily reposed by one, and the influence Avhieh naturally groAVS out of the confidence is possessed by the other, and this confidence is abused, or the influence is exerted to obtain an advantage at the expense of the confiding party, the person so availing himself of his position avíII not be permitted to retain the advantage, although the transaction could not have been impeached if no such confidential relation existed.”

It is contended that the complaint does not shoAV that plaintiff AA7as damaged by the alleged fraud, — in other words, that he got just what he bargained for at the price he agreed to pay for it — and that, it therefore discloses no right of action, because fraud without consequent damage is not actionable. Apart from the averment in some of the counts that the lock was “worthless as an article of commerce and not salable or useful as a mechanical contrivance,” the law7 will infer damage as the necessary result of the fraud and deceit practiced upon him, AAhatever may have been the value of the right purchased. Conceding that it Avas worth what he paid for it, or even more, still he w7as induced by the deceit and artifice of his pretended co-purchaser, in w7'hom he had a right to repose the utmost confidence in all things pertaining to the transaction, to pay double the amount he w7ould haA7e had to pay if White had exercised towards him that good faith which the law7, as well as good morals, require of parties occupying their relation; and [434]*434by the amount of the excess, at least, which he was thus induced to pay, he was damaged. — Bergeron v. Miles, supra. And the fraud being such as would authorize the rescission of the sale, he was entitled, upon surrendering, or offering to surrender, the thing purchased, to recover the entire purchase money in an action for the fraud.

The representation alleged in some of the counts, made by White to induce the purchase, that he had personally sold several hundred dollars’ worth of the patented article in Alabama, was a representation of a material fact, upon which plaintiff had a right to rely. It was clearly a fact represented, and it was material because it affected the question of the salability and, indirectly, the merits of the lock. The subject matter of the transaction was not the lock, but the right to vend it in the State of Georgia, and the representation ivas well adapted to induce the belief that the article was salable. And plaintiff, by reason of the relation of trust and confidence in which the parties stood, was entitled to rely on the representation without making'the diligent investigation as to its truth, or exercising that degree of care and judgment, which might have been required of him if no such relation had existed.

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Bluebook (online)
119 Ala. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-white-ala-1898.