Lane v. Shellman

2 Mich. N.P. 205
CourtCircuit Court of the 9th Circuit of Michigan
DecidedMay 15, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Mich. N.P. 205 (Lane v. Shellman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 9th Circuit of Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Shellman, 2 Mich. N.P. 205 (Mich. Super. Ct. 1871).

Opinion

By the Court,

Brown, J.

The statute, ((7. L., § 3671,) provides that “ The plaintiff in actions arising out of or founded upon a contract shall be entitled to a warrant upon filing with the Justice an affidavit made by the plaintiff, or some one in his behalf, that the plaintiff has good reason to believe,”

“ Third. — That there was fraud or breach of trust.”

Paragraph 3873, provides that, “ In all cases on application for a warrant under the third subdivision of section 19, the person applying therefor shall by affidavit show the facts and circumstances within the knowledge of the person making such affidavit, constituting the grounds of the application where! [207]*207the Justice may the better judge of the necessity and propriety of Issuing such warrant.” The affidavit in question is framed with a view to the arrest of the defendant on the ground of fraud in procuring from the plaintiff his property. Does the affidavit show affirmatively such facts and circumstances as tend to show that the defendant employed any trick or artifice by which the plaintiff was induced to part with his property',?

The characteristic of fraud is the intention to deceive. It is true that equity sometimes recognizes constructive fraud, as where one’s acts though not originating in any evil design, tend to deceive and operate substantially as a fraud upon private rights or interests. But to entitle a person to a warrant under the statute above quoted, the fraud must be actual or positive, and by this is meant the intentional and successful employment of some cunning, deception or artifice used to circumvent, cheat or deceive another.

The action in this case arises out of an alleged contract into which the plaintiff .alleges he was induced to enter on account and by reason of certain misrepresentations of the defendant.— It was incumbent upon him then t-o show in his affidavit the terms of the contract; the representations of the defendant upon which he claims to rely; that relying upon the truth of such representations he was induced to part with his property ; that such representations were false and that the defendant knew them to he false, and that he has suffered damage by reason of the premises.

These requisites constitute the ground of application for the warrant, and the statute already quoted requires the person applying for such warrant to show by his affidavit the facts and circumstances within his knowledge constituting the grounds of his application, that the Justice may the better judge of the necessity and propriety of issuing such warrant. Indeed, the Jus. tice cannot legally judge of the necessity and propriety of issuing such warrant without the presentation of the facts and circumstances referred to. He has no right to infer fraud unless there is some legal evidence tending to establish it. The affidavit under consideration sets forth the contract and the alleged statements and representations of the defendant, and states [208]*208with sufficient certainty that the plaintiff believed and relied upon them, and that he was thereby induced to exchange his property for the house which the defendant claimed was his.— Following this averment the affiant uses .this language: “ And thereby said Solomon Shellman did fraudulently and designedly obtain from deponent the said cow in part payment of said house, which cow was of the value of sixty dollars.” The word “thereby,” must I think, relate to the representations referred to, so that the affidavit declares substantially that by these representations the defendant did fraudulently and designedly obtain from the plaintiff his cow in part payment for the house.— Thus far there is no direct allegation that the statements were false, and no court would be warranted in inferring from the 1 an guage used that the defendant knew that fact. In the concluding paragraph of the affidavit the plaintiff avers that the “ house was not as represented by Shellman, his property, nor had he any right, title or interest in said house, and no right or authority to sell the same, as he, deponent, has since the said cow was delivered to him, ascertained.” In this paragraph no reference is made, to the scienter. While the Court will not weigh the testimony produced before the magistrate in the affidavit upon a given point, yet where evidence tending to show certain facts is necessary to confer jurisdiction, and where it appears that no such evidence has been produced, the Court is bound to hold that subsequent proceedings before such magistrate were unauthorized. The mere fact that a statement is declared to be false, is not to be taken as prima facie evidence that the person making such statement knew it to he false, nor is an allegation in the affidavit that the party made certain statements and that he thereby fraudulently and designedly obtained deponent’s property, to be taken as evidence of scienter. Such an allegation is merely a conclusion and not the statement of facts and circumstances from which the magistrate can legally draw a conclusion. This view of the case renders it unnecessary to consider the other points raised.

The judgment of the Justice must be reversed, annulled and hold for naught.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Mich. N.P. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-shellman-micirct9-1871.