Long v. Krause

181 N.W. 372, 105 Neb. 538, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 60
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1921
DocketNo. 21214
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 N.W. 372 (Long v. Krause) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Krause, 181 N.W. 372, 105 Neb. 538, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 60 (Neb. 1921).

Opinion

Rose, J.

This is an action to recover damages in the sum of $992,000 on account of the fraud of defendants in inducing plaintiffs to sell and transfer to them a 640-acre ranch in Sherdian codnty for $8,000. The difference between the damages and the sale price is based on the value of potash in the water of a private lake covering about 240 acres of the land. Plaintiffs allege that, without knowledge of the potash in the water, they regarded the lake as a detriment, and were induced by the fraud of defendants, who knew the facts, to sell and transfer to them the ranch, including the lake, without any consideration for the potash. Defendants denied the fraud charged and pleaded good faith in the negotiations and purchase. Upon a trial of the issues the jury rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiffs for $75,000. From a judgment thereon defendants have appealed.

The controlling question on appeal is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the Verdict. Defendants, contend that there is no evidence of actionable fraud; that plaintiffs fixed their own price, which was paid; that there was no concealment; that there was no misstatement of any material fact; that defendants did not know the. contents of the water; that it had no commercial value; that plaintiffs and defendants had the same means of acquiring knowledge; and that clear and satisfactory evidence of the fraud charged is wanting. The evidence and the argument from the standpoint of defendants háve not escaped attention, nor have precedents and divergent views of the law been overlooked. The position of defendants would be unassailable, if the testimony in their behalf could be accepted on appeal without question; but the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict must be determined by the proofs tending to make a case in favor of plaintiffs, since the jury found the issues of fact in their favor.

The circumstances surrounding the negotiations are material to the inquiry. Plaintiffs were husband and wife, and with two small children lived on the ranch fin contro[540]*540versy. They were without practical knowledge of chemistry. They lived in a sparsely settled country and were engaged chiefly in stock-raising. Their nearest neighbor was more than two miles away. They were 12 miles from a railroad and 40 miles from the county .seat. They had no telephone and no rural mail service. The snow Avas a foot deep and the weather was cold. Travel by automobile was suspended. Peter J. Long, plaintiff, had been on a saddle-horse looking after his stock. Chilled by the cold, he came home in the evening and found defendant John H. Krause there. The two men had met before, but were practically unacquainted, though their ranches were only five miles apart. There is believable testimony from which the folloAving facts and conclusions may be inferred:

Peter J. Long, plaintiff, managed three sections of contiguous land, but two of the sections were owned by his father, who resided in California. A small portion of the lake was on a section owned by the latter. Krause said he heard the land was for sale, and was told that plaintiffs had never so stated to any one. Krause said he wanted the land for grazing and other stock-raising purposes and asked Long to put a price on the three sections. After some reflection Long said he would take $17,000. Krause insisted that was too much, owing to the amount of water— 240 acres of lake — and offered $13,000. This was refused. An offer of $15,000 followed and was likewise rejected. Krause finally said he would pay $17,000. Long, in the event of a sale, wanted a lease permitting him to retain possession for a year to dispose of his live stock. This was agreeable to both. Long started to ask about a potash plant at Holland, about 14 miles away, and Krause intimated that the promoters were not doing very much there “except having a little smoke.” Long accepted a check for $300, and agreed to transfer to defendants the title to the three sections for $17,000, with the understanding that the latter Avould lease the lands to plaintiffs for a year for $700. These negotiations occurred late in Decern[541]*541her, 1915, and the deeds and the lease were delivered February 3, 1916. The lease contains the provision that defendants “'reserve full rights to all the lakes on said lands for any purpose for which they may desire to use them, during the life of this lease, together with full rights to sublet their rights to said lakes.” Plaintiffs had no knowledge of this reservation when the lease and the deeds were delivered. Of the purchase price plaintiffs received $8,000 for their section and Long’s father received $9,000 for his two sections. Defendants knew that the lake contained valuable deposits of potash, and plaintiffs did not. Plaintiffs believed the statements of John H. Krause and relied on them. Otherwise the sale for $17,000 would not have been made. Within a short time defendants sold the lands in the three sections for $15,000, but retained the, lake, which is now connected by a pipeline with a potash plant at Antioch, where there is a railroad station. Defendants have an interest in the plant mentioned. When plaintiffs executed and delivered their deed the value of the lake for potash, if the potash were fr„ee on board the cars at Antioch, would aggregate $480,000. The jury believed testimony from which the facts and conclusions narrated are inferable.

The question is: Did plaintiffs prove actionable fraud? This is not the case of an owner of land trying to sell it. It is the case of a stranger, with secret knowledge of valuable mineral deposits in the waters of a private lake on land, inducing the. owner, without such knowledge, to' sell the water for little or nothing. From the standpoint of inducing a sale under the circumstances outlined, Krause employed the artifices of fraud in at least three material respects. (1) He pretended that he wanted the land for grazing and other stock-raising purposes. Had he told the truth, namely, that he wanted the three sections of land to get control of the 240-acre lake, he would have aroused the interest of plaintiffs in the water which had been considered by them to be a detriment. Having of his own volition spoken when speech was not required, he [542]*542should have confined himself to the truth. His passive privilege of remaining silent .for the purpose of availing himself of the fruits of superior knowledge did not include affirmative aid amounting to deceit. (2) He intimated that the ranch would be more valuable, if it were not for the lake, whereas the great value of the lake, on account of the deposits of potash therein, was the real object of his, negotiations. Since he voluntarily spoke on that subject, without any legal obligation to do so, it was incumbent on him to be truthful and to say nothing to deceive plaintiffs. (3) By a false insinuation he led plaintiffs to believe that the plant in coui’se of construction for the evaporation of valuable lake waters on a commercial scale at Hoffland amounted to little or nothing. That the truth would have prevented a sale for $17,000 is fairly inferable.

In cases like this the materiality of the deception does not depend on its effect on the purchase price, but upon its influence on the minds of the vendors in entering into contracts of sale. Masterton v. Beers, 29 N. Y. Super. Ct. 368; Stewart v. Wyoming Cattle Ranche Co., 128 U. S. 383.

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Related

Johnson v. Richards
52 N.W.2d 737 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1952)
In Re Dryden's Estate
52 N.W.2d 737 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1952)
Remmenga v. Selk
34 N.W.2d 757 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1948)
Krause v. Long
192 N.W. 729 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
181 N.W. 372, 105 Neb. 538, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-krause-neb-1921.