Miller v. John

111 Ill. App. 56, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 196
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 8, 1903
DocketGen. No. 4192
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 111 Ill. App. 56 (Miller v. John) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. John, 111 Ill. App. 56, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 196 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ohalkly John, appellee, sued Joseph T. Miller, Frank P. Stabler and Frank W. Walzer, appellants, in an action on the case for. fraud and deceit. The declaration is in two counts, the first of which charges that appellee was the owner, of 160 acres of land in Whiteside County, Illinois, known as the Jordan farm, worth $80 per acre, and 160 acres in Kansas valued at $7 per acre. That there was a body of land in Barron County, "Wisconsin, consisting of 320 acres,, which' the owners thereof wanted to sell, and that the defendants being desirous of disposing of the Wisconsin land to the plaintiff, wrongfully intending to defraud and deceive the plaintiff, falsely, fraudulently and deceitfully represented to the plaintiff that the Wisconsin land :

(a) Belonged to an estate to which there was a large number of heirs; that the owners could not agree because each one wanted this particular tract; that the rest of the estate had been divided, and that the owners had agreed to sell this to an outside party in order to make it satisfactory and that it could be had at a great bargain;

(5) That there was a good log house and a good log barn on the land;

(c) That it was all fenced;

(d) That about forty or fifty acres was cleared and seeded down in timothy, and’ the balance was covered with good timber, such as would maké good lumber, and that the part north of the cleared land would make 800 or 900 cords of wood worth $5 per cord in that locality, and that the owners had been offered $1,600 for the timber on the stump on that part north of the cleared land, and that the owners asked $8,000 for the 320 acres, and the land was cheap at $25 per acre;

(e) That the land laid as nice as his Jordan farm, and was not broken or stony, and that if the owners would trade it to appellee for his Jordan farm, appellee would have the best of the bargain.

It is also a\Terred that the appellee, not having seen the Wisconsin land but relying and confiding in the statements and representations of the appellants, bargained with appellants to exchange his Jordan farm and his Kansas 160 acres for the Wisconsin land, and executed deeds to the defendants for the same.

All of the foregoing representations of the defendants respecting the Wisconsin land are charged to be false, made knowingly and wilfully for the purpose of misleading, deceiving and defrauding appellee, and that the Wisconsin land was of little or no value, by means whereof the appellee is damaged to the amount of $8,000.

The second count is substantially the same as the first, except that it charges that “ the defendants combining and confederating then and there represented to the plaintiff and so promised and agreed with the plaintiff that they, the defendants, would, as the plaintiff’s agents, trade and exchange for the plaintiff his said farm subject to said mortgage, for other farm lands of greater value, consisting of 32u acres of land in the State of Wisconsin,” and then and there falsely and fraudulently made the representations in substance set out in the first count of the .declaration.

Issue was joined on a plea of not guilty. Trial by a jury resulting in a verdict of guilty as to all of the defendants and assessing the plaintiff’s damages at $5,440, of which $940 was remitted at the suggestion of the trial court, which, after overruling motion for new trial, rendered judgment on the verdict for $4,500, to which exception was taken, and the case is before us by defendants’ appeal from that judgment.

Fifteen different assignments of error are made on the record, but it will not be necessary to take all of them up in detail or in the order set out in the abstract or the brief of appellant. It is contended that the court erred in denying the motion for new trial because the evidence did not justify a verdict against all of the defendants jointly or either, or any of them. It is also contended that the motion for a new trial should have been sustained because there was a misjoinder of causes of action in the declaration; the argument being that because the second count sets out the contractual relation of principal and agent, that the second count is based on contract and that the measure of damages under the two counts is entirely different.

Before taking up the first assignment of error, we will dispose of this one. While the second count introduces the relation of principal and agent, it is not a count on the contract, but is in tort for fraud and deceit. The relation of principal and agent is no reason why the agent may not be sued in an action of tort by his principal, and in such case the measure of damages is the same as if. the relation did not exist. In Page v. Wells, 37 Mich., at page 421, Chief Justice Cooley says:

“ For negligence, bad faith or dishonesty he (an agent) would be liable to his employer.”

Again he says:

“ A positive affirmation of the quality of lands as of one’s personal knowledge when he has no knowledge on the subject, whereby his employer is misled and injured, should certainly render the person making it liable, either on the ground of bad faith or negligence.”

The same eminent judge lays down the same doctrine in his work on torts. Yol. 1, p. 526. The following authorities support the same doctrine. Story on Agency, Secs. 218 and 333; Prescott v. White, 18 App. 332; Shipherd v. Field, 70 Ill. 438. Flor is it of any importance that in the first count the defendants are charged directly with the fraud and deceit, while in the second count they are charged with conspiring and confederating together for the purpose of committing a fraud. The cause of action in both counts is substantially one for fraud and deceit by false representations, and the right of recovery in both counts is governed by the law applicable to cases of that character. The allegation of conspiracy and combination of the defendants to commit the fraud does not affect the essential grounds of recovery. The gravamen is the fraud and damage and not the combination. Brackett v. Griswold, 112 N. Y. 454.

The means by which a fraud may be perpetrated are immaterial, except in so far as they may show, in connection with the damage sustained, an actionable injury. In such case the proof of a conspiracy is only important to connect a defendant with the transactions and to charge him with the acts and declarations of his co-conspirators, where otherwise he could not have been implicated. Wherever it becomes necessary to prove a conspiracy in order to connect a defendant with a fraud, no allegation of conspiracy need be in the declaration in order to make the proof competent. Hutchin v. Hutchin, 7 Hill, 104; Brackett v. Griswold, supra.

The essential elements in an action for fraud and deceit have been well defined ever since the action came into use. They are tersely stated in Arthur v. Griswold, 55 N. Y. 400, by Chief Justice Church: “ Representation, falsity,scienter, deception and injury.” Commenting on this definition of Justice Church, the Court of Appeals of Hew York, in 112 N. Y. 467, supra, say :

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Bluebook (online)
111 Ill. App. 56, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-john-illappct-1903.