Knuckolls v. Lea

29 Tenn. 577
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Tenn. 577 (Knuckolls v. Lea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knuckolls v. Lea, 29 Tenn. 577 (Tenn. 1850).

Opinion

Turley, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The contract of sale for the mills, distillery and two hundred head of hogs was made between Knuckolls and Lea, on the 22d day of April, 1887.

Knuckolls, as consideration, paid Lea in. hand eleven hundred and eleven dollars, and executed to him his several notes, one for eight hundred and eighty-nine dollars, due 1st day of January, 1838, one for two thousand dollars, due 1st January, 1839, one for two thousand dollars, due 1st day of January, 1840, one for two thousand dollars, due 1st January, 1841, and one for two thousand dollars, due 1st January, 1842. Lea executed his bond by which he bound himself in a [578]*578penalty of twenty thousand dollars to convey the premises sold, to Knuckolls on the 1st day of January, 1838, and agreed that provided said Knuckolls could not conveniently pay the notes above described, as they fell due, he would not sue or harrass him for the payment until he could have time to make payment out of the proceeds of the property.

On the 1st day of January, 1838, Lea executed a deed of conveyance for the premises thus sold to the defendant; and he entered into the possession of the land, mills, distillery, &c.

The complainant alleges that he soon found, after entering upon the possession of the premises, that he had been grievously cheated and defrauded by the defendant in this: that at the time of the purchase, he knew nothing of the income yielded by said mills and distillery, and in relation thereto relied wholly upon the representation of the defendant, and those who were in his service, by which he was induced to believe that an annual value of near two thousand dollars might be realized therefrom; when, in truth, he found that the annual income of said property was not near one-half of the amount thus represented.

But he further states, that notwithstanding he found himself thus defrauded and cheated, yet he felt disposed, in order to avoid a law suit with the defendant, to comply with the contract as made, and he accordingly afterwards paid the note of eight hundred and eighty-nine dollars, which was due 1st of January, 1838, and the note of two thousand dollars, due 1st of January, 1840, and about one hundred and thirty-two dollars of the note of two thousand dollars due 1st of January, 1839. Complainant further alleges that the defendant [579]*579in violation of his original contract of sale, by which he agreed not to sue or harrass him, if he could not conveniently pay the notes as executed, at the times they severally fell due, until he could have time to make payment out of the proceeds of the property, negotiated the- note for two thousand dollars due the 1st day of January, 1839, to Martin, Pleasants & Co., of New Orleans, who have sued thereon, notwithstanding the fact that the whole income of the property since he has had it in possession, though he has done the best he oould with it, does not amount to one-half of what he has already paid to Lea in consideration of said purchase.

The bill prays that Martin, Pleasants & Co. be enjoined from further proceeding to enforce at law, the suit against him upon the note of two thousand dollars due 1st of January, 1839, and that Lea be enjoined from negotiating the two notes for two thousand dollars each, due 1st January, 1841 and 1842, and that the contract be rescinded.

Now the sum and substance of the causes of complaint as set forth in the bill, are, that complainant gave greatly more for the property than it was worth; that he was induced to do this, by the fraudulent representations of Lea and his confederates, that the annual profit which might be realized from the property bought, was greatly more than he found it to be upon experiment, and that Lea had assigned one of the notes in violation of his agreement not to sue or harrass him, if he could not conveniently pay the notes as they fell due, until he could make payment out of the proceeds of the property, which he had not been able to do.

[580]*580There is nothing else in this bill but facts wholly immaterial, which go to show that this has been a very unfortunate speculation for the defendant; that at the time he made it, he was a man of good substance, and unembarrassed in his pecuniary affairs, and that he has been ruined by it.

Now the first observations we think proper to make upon this bill, is that it is in all probability demurrable upon its face.

The fact that the complainant has made a most unfortunate contract, one which has ruined him pecuniarily, can constitute no ground for relief in this court; there must be distinct and substantive grounds of equitable right, upon which he can stand, independent of the hardship of his case. And what are these as asserted?

1. That he was ignorant of the annual value of the property, and that he was induced by the fraudulent representations of Lea, the defendant, and his confederates, to believe that it was greatly more than it turned out to be in his possession.

2. That Lea transferred one of the notes, and that it was not convenient for him to pay it at maturity, and he has been sued upon it, in violation of the agreement that he was not to be harrassed or sued if he could not conveniently pay the notes as they fell due, but that he should have time to make payment out of the property.

As to the first ground, viz, the fraudulent representations of Lea as to the annual profits of the property sold, it is to be observed, first, if these representations, as they are charged to have been made, are to be considered, merely as exaggerated estimates of Lea, highly colored praises of the value of the property, such [581]*581as most men are apt to use in relation to their property when they are about to sell or exchange it, it amounts to nothing but mere puffing, upon which, it is egregious folly for a purchaser to rely; and it is no ground for equitable relief, that he has found himself disappointed in the expectations created by them.

But in the second place, if the representations in relation to this subject as they are charged in the bill, are to be considered as something more than exaggerated estimates of profits; that they are to be considered as fraudulent misrepresentations concocted by the defendant and others, with the view of cheating the complainant, and procuring from him a price for the property greatly beyond its actual value, yet the complainant alleges in the bill, that after he had ascertained this fact, after he had found himself cheated and defrauded by the defendant, he was still disposed to execute the contract .as made, and did afterwards pay the note for eight hundred and eighty-nine dollars, and the note for two thousand dollars, due 1st January, 1840, and one hundred and thirty-two dollars on the note for two thousand dollars, due 1st January, 1839; and it further appears in relation to this matter, that he never altered this, his disposition and intention, until about the 9th day of November, 1839, nearly two years after he entered into possession of the premises, and not until after he had been sued upon the note due January, 1839, by Martin, Pleasants & Co., the assignee of Lea.

The inference then is irresistible, that it is not because of the fraud practiced upon him in the misrepresentation of the value of the property that he seeks to rescind this contract; but because of the fact that he has been sued upon one of the notes before it was [582]

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29 Tenn. 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knuckolls-v-lea-tenn-1850.