Means v. Brickell

20 S.C.L. 657
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1835
StatusPublished

This text of 20 S.C.L. 657 (Means v. Brickell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Means v. Brickell, 20 S.C.L. 657 (S.C. Ct. App. 1835).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

There can be no question that a knowledge of the-boundary and the quantity of woodland, particularly if on that account it was more valuable, was necessary to enable the de-. fendant to judge of the propriety of purchasing, and of the reasonableness of the price demanded; and it. is equally clear that if he has been deceived in these particulars by the representations of the plaintiff, the injury to him is precisely the same, whether they were made falsely and fraudulently,. [660]*660and with intent to deceive, or by mistake and in the belief that they were true. If they had been wilfully false, the principle on which the instructions to the jury proceeds, concedes that the defence ought to have prevailed, but that is expressly no-gatived by the case stated, and it follows necessarily that they must have been made by mistake, and that when plaintiff con-voved to defendant, he supposed he was describing the land as he had represented it. The manner in which the mistake arose, is not stated in the report, and for the purpose of testing the question, we may suppose that the plaintiff derived his knowledge of the boundary and quantity of woodland from some one who might be supposed to know, or that it had resulted from some error in some previous survey by a regular surveyor, or- from any other cause calculated to deceive the plaintiff — and hence the question now to be considered.

The confidence and zeal manifested by the counsel in the prosecution and defence of the appeal, has induced me to take more time, arid bestow upon the case more than ordinary consideration ; and the x’esult of my reflections are, that the whole difficulty has originated in a mistake as to the true grounds of the controversy, for I don’t believe that where the case is clearly understood, there will be found even a dictum, in any book of authority, opposed to the defendant’s right to the relief which he seeks in some form or other, if, as the case supposes, he was influenced to make the purchase by the misrepresentations of the plaintiff although made by mistake.

Relief against mistakes in fact, is a well known branch of Equity jurisdiction,, and where the contract has been fully executed, I incline to think that relief could only be obtained in Chancery. But with regard to contracts merely executory, there is no doubt that it is a legitimate common law jurisdiction, for where the mistake is susceptible of the common law mode of proof, even that Court would not lend its aid to carry the contract into effect, without requiring the plaintiff to repair the wrong to defendant; and if any one principle can be regarded as definitely settled by the decisions of one of our Courts, it is, that in actions on contracts, the defendant at law may in his defence avail himself of the misrepresentations of the plaintiff in relation to the consideration of the contract, whether they were made through fraud or mistake.

The first case in the order of time which has been preserved, is Gray v. Handkinson, 1 Bay, 278, which occured.in 1792. That was debt on a bond, and the defence was that it was given for a tract of land which was represented to contain a mill seat, and was valuable principally on that account, as the tract was principally pine land. Shortly after the purchase, it, was discovered that the mill seat, and a considerable quanti[661]*661ty of timbered land adjoining, was covered oy an older survey, by which means the great object of the purchase was defeated. This was a case on the Circuit, but tried at a time when three judges presided, and the Court consisting of Rutledge, Ch. J. and Burke and Bay, Justices, instructed the jury that this was a “ kind of equitable defence which formerly belonged to the Chancery jurisdiction ; but that the Courts of law had lately let the parties into it in a Court of common law as well as in a Court of Equity, on the ground of fraud ; that this fraud might arise cither from the intent and design of one party to impose on the other, or from circumstances which neither party knew of, or could foresee at the time of the contract, but that from whatever cause it arose, it was a proper subject for the investigation of this Court, wherever it could be traced out, and came as well within the province of the jury, as before any tribunaland under these instructions the jury found a general verdict for the defendant; and the Reporter adds in a noto, that even then a great number of causes had been determined on that principle.

The case of the State v. Gilliard, which followed in 1796, was heard by a full bench of judges on appeal, and seems to have received full consideration, and to have been decided on principle. There the defendant had purchased a tract of land at a public sale made by the commissioners of confiscated estates, and at the time of the sale, a plat with explanatory notes was produced, exhibiting a stream of water running through it, whereon was a fine mill seat, which was the principal inducement to the purchase, and which upon examination, turned out to be a dry gully for three fourths of the year; and it was held that this was a sufficient ground for the entire recision of the contract. It is not stated in the report by whom, or by whose authority, or on what occasion the plat was made ; but from the nature of the case it cannot be supposed that it was made by, or under the instructions of the commissioners, for they were the mere agents of the State to make the sale, and had no interest, and therefore no possible motive to misrepresent the true condition of the land. Burke, J. who delivered the opinion of the whole Court, in giving-judgement for the defendant, put the case on the civil law-principle, that a sound price deserves a sound commodity, and 'that when there is a failure of consideration, or misrepresentation, or concealment of material circumstances, it vitiates the contract in ¿oía, or entitles the party injured to such an abatement in the price of the thing sold or demanded, as would make him full reparation for the injury sustained; and he maintains that the incorporation of this rule of the civil law into our jurisprudence,, is warranted by our discount law. [662]*662which, he supposes, was framed with reference to it, and by which, in all actions for the recovery of debts, the defendant is authorized to give in evidence, by way of discount, “any. account, reckoning, demand, cause, matter or thing, which he may have against the plaintiff,” Pub. Laws, 246 ; and in this respect, conferring on the law Courts an equitable jurisdiction.

In Adams ads. Wylie, 1 N. & M’C., 78, which was debt on bond, the defence was, that it was given for a tract of land which was represented at the sale as containing 294 acres of high land, besides a body of marsh ; whereas it only contained 202 acres of high land. The evidence in support of the defence was rejected by the Circuit Court, on the ground that the deed was the only admissible evidence to show what the contract was. It does not appear from the report whether this misrepresentation was wilful or not, but in ordering a new trial to let in the evidence, Judge Coicock, who delivered the opinion of the Court, puts it directly upon the authority of Gray v. Handkinson, which he remarks, had never been disputed.

In Tunno v.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.C.L. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/means-v-brickell-scctapp-1835.