Lovell v. Dotson

223 P. 1061, 128 Wash. 669, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 570
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1924
DocketNo. 17609
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 223 P. 1061 (Lovell v. Dotson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovell v. Dotson, 223 P. 1061, 128 Wash. 669, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 570 (Wash. 1924).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

On April 7,1920, the appellant, Dotson, gave to one Harry Dudman his promissory note for the sum of $1,200, payable six months after date, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum. The note was payable at the banking house of the Pioneer National Bank of Bitzville, and was in form a negotiable instrument as that term is defined in our negotiable instruments act. Bern. Comp. Stat., § 3392 [P. C. § 4072]. At the same time he executed and de[670]*670livered to Dudman a writing signed by him, addressed to the bank named, in which he stated in substance that it would be satisfactory to him if the bank saw fit to purchase the note. Dudman had theretofore had a checking account with the bank, and had drawn checks thereon in excess of the amount thereof. On April 9, 1920, two days after he had received the note from Dotson, Dudman appeared at the bank with the note and desired the bank to purchase it and apply the proceeds, in so far as might be found necessary, to the satisfaction of his checks. The officer of the bank to whom the note was presented declined to purchase it, informing Dudman that it was not bankable paper or such paper as the bank could handle. The president of the bank was then called in consultation, and after some negotiation the president and the bank cashier offered to loan to Dudman as individuals sufficient to take up his checks and to take the note as security for the loan. This transaction was carried out, the officers of the bank advancing to Dudman the sum of $570 for that purpose.

Dudman was the president of a mining corporation which owned a mine located in the state of Idaho. He was engaged in selling the capital stock of the corporation, and it was for such stock that the Dotson note was given. Work upon the mine had been commenced sometime in the-year 1918, and had continued up to at least as late as April 1, 1920; a witness for the appellant stating that on that day most of the employees quit work because their wages were not paid for the preceding month. The status and condition of the mine at the time the note was given also appears in the testimony of this witness. He testified that the mining company had expended some forty thousand dollars in buildings • and other improvements on and about the mining property, that it had constructed a road to it at [671]*671a cost of about ten thousand dollars, and that it had done some tunneling, the amount or cost of which was not stated. The witness further testified, however, that it had become apparent as early as the beginning of winter in 1919 that the mine was valueless; that Dudman was frequently at the mine and knew that it was valueless, and that he had caused to be constructed open ore bins at the portal of the tunnel, and had caused these to be filled with selected ores taken from the mine so that “if prospective investors came up there they could see it.” The witness also testified that, while picked specimens from the ores taken from the tunnel near its portal showed considerable values, ore taken therefrom beyond the first fifty feet had no value whatever.

Dudman, in selling the stock, seemed to have two principal schemes. He would first attempt to sell the stock outright, and, failing in this, would promise to repurchase the stock at an advanced price if it was returned to him at a later date which he definitely named; representing that the mine had an unlimited quantity of valuable ores, and that the mining company had a temporary need of money to enable it to continue operating the mine until it could complete its preparations for shipping ore, which would occur before the date he named, and at which time the mine would immediately become self-supporting and amply able to take care of its needs. Dudman sold large quantities of the stock, and in certain instances gave a written agreement to the purchaser to repurchase the stock at a stated date. Dotson testified that he made the same agreement with him, and that it was this agreement that induced him to purchase the stock, but in his case the agreement seems to have been oral, as no writing was produced showing the promise. All of the written agreements shown in the evidence were made at a time [672]*672subsequent to tbe time of tbe sale to Dotson, and there was, of course, no evidence that any of these agreements had been breached prior to the purchase of the stock by Dotson. Nor was'there any evidence that it had become generally known that the mine was valueless at the time of the sale of the stock to Dotson, nor any direct evidence that the indorsees of the note had, at the time of its indorsement, any particular knowledge to that effect, or any more knowledge of the honesty or dishonesty of the transaction than had Dotson himself.

Before the maturity of the loan which the note was given to secure, and before the maturity of the note itself, it became known that the mining stock was worthless, and that the maker of the note had received no valuable consideration for its execution. Dudman did not pay the loan made to him by the officers of the bank, and Dotson refused to pay the note. The holders of the note thereupon assigned the note for collection to the respondent, Lovell, who instituted the present action to recover thereon. To the complaint, which was in the form in common use in such cases, Dotson set up want of consideration for the note; that he was induced to execute it by the fraud of Dudman, and that the purchasers of the note had notice and knowledge of the fraud at the time they purchased it. The reply was in substance a general denial of the affirmative allegations of the answer, and on the issues thus made, the cause was tried to the court sitting with a jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, Dotson, whereupon the plaintiff moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. This motion the court granted, entering a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the amount paid for the note, with interest. The appeal before us is from the judgment so entered.

On the first question discussed in the arguments— [673]*673whether there was sufficient evidence of fraud in the transaction by which Dotson was induced to execute the note to sustain a verdict so finding — we are constrained to agree with the appellant. It is perhaps the general rule, as the respondent argues, that fraud cannot ordinarily be predicated upon a promise to do something in the future, even though the promisor does not perform, but there are exceptions to the rule. As we said in Hewett v. Dole, 69 Wash. 163, 124 Pac. 374, where a promise is made merely as a means of deceiving, and with no intention to perform, it constitutes such fraud as will entitle the injured person to relief. In this instance, if the witness to whose testimony we have specifically referred is entitled to be believed, and whether he was so or not was a question for the jury, Dudman knew, at the time he made the promise which induced the execution of the note, that the mine was valueless and that there was then no possibility of obtaining from the products of the mine sufficient funds to redeem his promise, and we think the evidence sufficiently clear that he had no other resource from which to obtain them. The conclusion follows inevitably that his only purpose in making the promise was to deceive, and this, under the rule of the cited case, was sufficient to avoid the transaction.

But the trial judge rested his conclusion on the other branch of the controversy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 P. 1061, 128 Wash. 669, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovell-v-dotson-wash-1924.