McAllister v. Benjamin

121 A. 263, 96 Vt. 475, 1923 Vt. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 4, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 121 A. 263 (McAllister v. Benjamin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAllister v. Benjamin, 121 A. 263, 96 Vt. 475, 1923 Vt. LEXIS 195 (Vt. 1923).

Opinion

Watson, C. J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover damages resulting from alleged false and fraudulent representations made by the defendant in the sale at auction by him to the plaintiff of certain registered Holstein heifers, September 25, 1918. The trial was upon plea of general denial and resulted in a verdict of $2,250 for the plaintiff.

It appeared that the defendant made certain representations, by way of advertisement of the auction sale, in the issue of September 21, 1918, of. the Barre Daily Times, and orally at the auction, from the. auctioneer’s stand. The representations in the Daily Times, material here, were that “All this stock” (advertised for sale by auction, which included the Holstein heifers mentioned above) “has been tubérculin tested since February and is a healthy sound lot. ’ ’ Defendant testified that, before the auction opened, he stated publicly from the auctioneer’s stand that “all the animals to be sold at the auction had been tuberculin tested since February”; that-“the test papers for the animals were available to purchasers”; and that “every animal to be sold there at that auction was all straight and all right in every way..” Defendant further testified that he made those statements with the idea of inducing people to buy at the auction, and that that was the intention with which he put his advertisement in the paper.

The plaintiff purchased at the auction six Holstein heifers, and at the trial sought damages with respect to three of them, for that he claimed and his evidence tended to show that defend[484]*484ant’s representations, quoted in the preceding paragraph, were each and all of them false and fraudulent to the knowledge of defendant when he made them, or that he made them as of his own knowledge, when in fact he knew he had no knowledge as to whether they were true or not; that the heifers had not been tuberculin tested, that the test papers were not available, and that the three heifers to which reference is here made were not “all straight and all right in every way,” but were, at the time of the auction, infected with bovine tuberculosis, by reason of which false and fraudulent representations the plaintiff suffered great damage with respect to the infected heifers, and also in that a valuable cow of his — Star Farm Yale Countess — and an Ayrshire heifer, contracted tuberculosis from the Holstein heifers so purchased, and, in that plaintiff was put to and sustained expense in protecting his herd from infection, and in eradicating the disease from his premises. He further claimed that he had been in the business of buying and selling cattle and in dairying, and that he sustained damages of $1,000 a year' in raising and caring for his herd and in developing his said business, and that he lost a profit of $1,000 a year in his business of buying and selling cattle and $100 per month in his business of dairying over a long period of time.

At the close of all the evidence defendant moved for a verdict to be directed in his favor on the following grounds:

(1) That the plaintiff by retaining the non-infected heifers after he knew that one of the others was diseased, elected to waive any right of -action he may have had in respect to the heifers particularly here in question; (2) there is no evidence that defendant made any false representations concerning any material fact connected with the sale in question; (3) the evidence shows that the plaintiff relied upon defendant’s agreement to buy back the heifers at an advance of $75 per head and not upon any reliance upon tuberculin test papers; (4) the plaintiff did not elect to rescind the agreement of purchase after having an opportunity to do so upon learning that at least one of the heifers was diseased, but expressly affirmed the contract of sale and continued to use the remaining heifers thereafter for several months and thereby accepted the heifers in question, and having so accepted the property and acquiesced in the sale, he could not thereafter repudiate the sale of September 25, 1918; (5) the [485]*485damages to the two other head of the plaintiff, not purchased of the defendant, (the Star Farm Vale Countess and the Ayrshire heifer,) are upon the evidence uncertain, conjectural and remote, and not a proper element of damage in any event; (6) there is no evidence that either the cow, Star Farm Vale Countess, or the Ayrshire heifer contracted tuberculosis or other disease from any of the heifers sold by the plaintiff to the defendant; (7) the evidence does not show that any damage has resulted to the plaintiff by reason of any representations made to him by the defendant; (8) there is no evidence that any representations were made by the defendant to the plaintiff with intent to deceive him; (9) the evidence shows that the plaintiff did not rely upon any representations made by the defendant, if any were made to the plaintiff, in the purchase of said heifers, but he relied upon the offer of the defendant to repurchase at an advance of $75 for each heifer which plaintiff might purchase after said offer had been made; (10) upon all the evidence for each of the reasons hereinbefore stated, there can be no recovery in respect to any items of damage claimed by the plaintiff; (11) there is no evidence that any of the heifers sold by the defendant to the plaintiff had tuberculosis at the time of the sale September 25, 1918. The motion was overruled and exception saved.

[1] The first and fourth grounds of the motion are based on the idea that inasmuch as the plaintiff did not rescind the contract of purchase when he discovered the fraud and deceit in connection therewith, he cannot maintain this action which in law affirms the contract. But this idea is unsound; for the plaintiff had a right to retain the property purchased and maintain an action for damages suffered by reason of the fraud and deceit. Mallory v. Leach, 35 Vt. 156, 82 A. D. 625; Oben v. Adams, 89 Vt. 158, 94 Atl. 506; Bartlett v. Bonazzi, 91 Vt. 192, 99 Atl. 886; Ward v. Marvin, 78 Vt. 141, 62 Atl. 46.

[2] The second ground of the motion that there was no evidence of defendant’s making false representations concerning any material fact connected with the sale in question; the eighth ground, that there was no evidence of any representations by defendant to the plaintiff with intent to deceive him; and the third and ninth grounds, that the evidence shows that plaintiff relied upon defendant’s agreement to buy back the heifers at the advanced price stated above, and not upon any reliance upon tuber[486]*486culin test papers, nor upon any representations made by defendant, were properly overruled. The record does not bear out these contentions by defendant. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that, induced by defendant’s advertisement in the Barre Times, which he saw and read, he attended the auction and there bought the heifers in question; that before the auction opened he heard defendant make the statements (given above from defendant’s own testimony) from the auctioneer’s stand; that in buying the heifers he relied upon said representations made by defendant in the paper and at the auction, believing them to be true; that plaintiff thereafter, on several occasions, demanded the tuberculin test papers of defendant, but the latter, not only never furnished them, but on a certain occasion, in the presence of plaintiff, said he brought those cattle into this State illegally, without their being tested, and in effect that test papers were not available.

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Bluebook (online)
121 A. 263, 96 Vt. 475, 1923 Vt. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcallister-v-benjamin-vt-1923.