Neilson v. Edwards

148 N.W. 844, 34 S.D. 399, 1914 S.D. LEXIS 141
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 148 N.W. 844 (Neilson v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neilson v. Edwards, 148 N.W. 844, 34 S.D. 399, 1914 S.D. LEXIS 141 (S.D. 1914).

Opinion

GATES, J.

This is an action for damages for deceit. The complaint, after alleging in substance that defendant on September 5, 1911, represented to plaintiff that he was the agent and had authority to sell for the owner a tract of land in Montana containing 600 acres, alleged that defendant did. at said time— “willfully, falsely, and fraudulently state and represent to this plaintiff that the said above described land was first-class arable land and could and would produce good crops of 'grain and alfalfa and that it was suitable for fanning purposes, and that the same was located within eight miles of a railroad station and market,, and that the said land, by reason of its said qualities and location, was reasonably worth at least $8 per acre, or $4,800 for the said tract, and that the qualities of said land were such that the plaintiff could, within a very short time, if he desired, sell the said land for $20 per acre, and for the purpose of further deceiving and defrauding this plaintiff, and as an assurance to the plaintiff that his representations were true, the defendant agreed that unless the plaintiff got $20 or more per acre for said land, he, the defendant, would forfeit $1,150 of the purchase price of said land. That the defendant, before and at the time of making said false and fraudulent representations-to the plaintiff, was informed by this plaintiff [402]*402and well knew that the plaintiff desired to purchase land for the purpose of operating a farm wherein he.could raise all kinds of grain and alfalfa, and that he did not desire to purchase any land that was not suitable for such purposes. That at the time aforesaid the plaintiff informed the defendant that he did not desire to purchase said land unless he should first have an opportunity to examine it, but that defendant willfully, falsely, and fraudulently and for the purpose of deceiving this plaintiff, and persuading him to purchase said land without examining the same, stated and represented to this plaintiff that unless the plaintiff purchased said land on that date, September 5, 1911, he could not purchase it at all, as he had certain payments to malee thereon at once, and, further, that another person was negotiating with him for the purchase of the same, and he reiterated and repeatedly stated and represented on said date to the plaintiff that the said land was suitable for farming purposes, as aforesaid, and of great value with the intent and purpose that plaintiff should rely upon such representations and purchase said land without examining the same. (3) That the plaintiff on said date, being so persuaded and induced by the defendant, and relying upon the truth of the said statements and representations concerning said land, its qualities and value, as so stated and represented by the defendant to- him, did purchase from him the said land and all of the interest of his principal, Reuben M. Cecil, the holder of the contract for deed therefor, for the sum of $4,800, and on that date paid to the said defendant the sum of $1,200 in cash, and conveyed to him a creamery and all of the machinery and appurtenances thereto in the city of Brookings, then owned and operated by the plaintiff, at the agreed value of $1,450, which creamery was fully examined 'by defendant at that time, and agreed to- pay to the defendant the further -sum of $1,150, making a total of $4,800. That thereupon the defendant caused to be assigned, to this plaintiff by the said Reuben M. Cecil, and Lydia, his wife, the certain contract for the sale of said premises by the Northern Pacific Railway Compairy, a corporation, which was the owner thereof, to the said Reuben M. Cecil, of St. Paul, Ramsey county, Minn., dated May 11, 1911, upon which it appears that the said Cecil had made but one payment of $200 and interest, and that there remained to be paid thereon the sum of $1,000 in annual payments of $200 each. [403]*403(4) That the plaintiff, on or about December 20, 1911, made an effort to examine the said land, but after arriving in the vicinity of said land he found the country was covered with snow to a great depth, and that it would be impossible to examine the same, or to ascertain its quality or value, and that the plaintiff was compelled to return home without ascertaining any of said facts. That plaintiff, on or about May 6, 1912, after the snow had gone, again went to examine said land, and thereupon he discovered the true character of said land and the false and fraudulent representations that had been made to him by the defendant as aforesaid. Plaintiff alleges that said land is not, and was not at the time of said transaction, good arable land, and that on the contrary the same was rough, impregnated with alkali, barren, with occasional tufts of sagebrush, and unsuitable and entirely unfit for raising crops of any kind, or alfalfa, and could not be used for farming purposes, as defendant well knew and had reason for knowing at the time of making the sale thereof to the plaintiff, and that the said land was valueless, or in any event worth not to exceed $2 per acre, and only fit, if for anything-, for the purpose of grazing, and for that purpose only on about 10 acres thereof, and that said land is entirely unfit and valueless for the purpose for which the plaintiff purchased it, to-wit, for farming and raising alfalfa and other crops. Further, that said land is not within eight miles of a railroad station, and that on the contrary the nearest railroad station thereto is about seventeen miles. (5) That if said land had been as represented by the defendant to the plaintiff as aforesaid, it would have been of the value of $8 per acre, or $4,800 altogether, but that as a matter of fact it is entirely valueless for the purpose of farming and raising crops, for which the plaintiff purchased it, and is of no value whatever, and that the plaintiff has sustained damages by reason of said premises and said willful, false, and fraudulént representations of the defendant, in the sum- of $4,800.”

[1] The answer of the defendant was a general denial. Upon the trial, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant moved for a directed verdict, which was denied. Defendant offered no evidence, and thereupon the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum ’of $2,000. From the judgment entered thereon, and from an order denying a new trial, defendant appeals. [404]*404The following excerpts from plaintiff’s testimony show his version of the representations made by defendant; the same constituting the only evidence upon that subject:

“He said it was eight miles from Baker. I asked him about the surrounding country. He said they raised all kinds of crops there, including corn, flax, and alfalfa. I asked him if this particular land was good for the same purposes. He said it was. * * * He said you could raise corn there and other grains. I asked him if it was all good, tillable land, and he said it was, but there was probably a few acres that could not be plowed. I understood him to say it could all be plowed but a few acres. It was 600 acres. He said there was one corner, in the south.corner I believe, that was worth $25 of anybody’s money. He said it was good grass land. I told him I had never had any experience and wanted him to do the square thing with me; that I did not want to do, any deal of the kind unless he told the truth about it. He told me that I did not need to worry about that part of it;-that as far as the land was concerned he thought I would be satisfied with it. He went to the trouble of calling it the 'Golden. Valley out there. He told me after we got that matter talked that I better make a check to him for $1,200.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 N.W. 844, 34 S.D. 399, 1914 S.D. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neilson-v-edwards-sd-1914.