Parker v. Inge

161 S.E. 884, 157 Va. 592, 1932 Va. LEXIS 314
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 14, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 S.E. 884 (Parker v. Inge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Inge, 161 S.E. 884, 157 Va. 592, 1932 Va. LEXIS 314 (Va. 1932).

Opinion

Gregory, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, W. G. Parker and Josephine B. Parker, his wife, filed their bill of complaint, asking that a certain deed made to them, on February 12, 1926, by the appellees, S. H. Inge and J. T. Inge, her husband, conveying 505% acres of land, be rescinded and the purchase price paid and the notes given as evidence of a portion thereof be restored to them, by reason of certain false representations made to them by one W. J. Storey who negotiated the sale.

The.trial court decided that the false representations alleged in the bill of complaint had been sustained by the proof; but further held that the appellants were not entitled to the relief prayed for because the appellant, W. G. Parker, had ratified the fraud. A decree was prepared and entered so holding and dismissing the bill, and this decree is now the subject of review by this court.

The outstanding facts over which there seems to be little or no dispute are as follows: The appellants, at the time the deed was executed and delivered to them, were residents of the State of North Carolina. The appellee, J. T. Inge, [595]*595being desirous of making sale of the land mentioned, negotiated with W. J. Storey for that purpose. He entered into a written agreement with Storey, whereby he agreed to sell the said land for the sum of $9,000.00 net, with the further understanding with Storey that his (Storey’s) compensation would be any amount obtained for the said land in excess of the $9,000.00. Storey was an experienced real estate agent, having been engaged in that business for some thirty years and he was familiar with this tract of land. The appellants were strangers in that community and before the negotiations started had never seen the land.

Storey communicated with the appellant, W. G. Parker, and they viewed the land together. Parker asked Storey to identify the land and designate the boundaries. He also asked Storey how much frontage the land had on the road from Waverly to Homeville. In reply to these two inquiries Storey told Parker that the tract embraced a certain timber area comprising approximately 272 acres. He also told Parker that the said tract adjoined the road above mentioned and bordered on the same for something over a mile. Parker did not desire the tract for agricultural purposes but wanted it primarily for the timber. Under these representations made by Storey, Parker was induced to purchase the said tract and on February 12, 1926, the appellees, S. H. Inge and J. T. Inge, her busband, executed and delivered a deed to appellants conveying to them the said tract for the consideration of $10,00.0.00, of which the sum of $4,470.00 was paid by the appellants assuming and agreeing to discharge a certain Federal Farm Loan mortgage which had been previously placed on the land by the appellees. For the residue of the purchase price, negotiable notes were executed payable to the appellee, S. H. Inge. One of these notes, amounting to $300.00, was transferred by S. H. Inge to the Bank of Lunenburg, at Kenbridge, Virginia, and it became the holder of the same for value.

[596]*596After the sale had been consummated the said tract remained in the possession of a tenant who had been placed there by the appellees, until January, 1927, at which time the premises were turned over to the appellants and they in turn placed them in the hands of their tenant.

In the fall of 1928, the appellant, Parker, posted the timbered lands, and sometime in December, 1928, a Mr. Birdsong went to North Carolina and notified Josephine B. Parker the other appellant that the timbered lands, which had been posted by W. G. Parker, her husband, belonged to him (Birdsong) and two other parties. Sometime in January, 1929, Parker called on the appellee, J. T. Inge, in Kenbridge and told him of the report which Birdsong had made to Mrs. Parker, in North Carolina, to which Inge replied: "I guess you have the number of acres.” Shortly thereafter on the same day he and Inge went to the said bank and Parker paid the said note of $300.00.

During the month of January, 1929, Parker paid an insurance premium amounting to $20.00 for a policy of insurance which had been issued, insuring the dwelling on the premises. On or about the 1st of February, 1929, after having been notified by the Federal Land Bank the second time of the maturity of an installment under its mortgage and at its second request, Parker paid the said Land Bank on account of the mortgage which he and his wife had assumed in the deed of February 12, 1926, an installment of $175.00.

The two representations made by Storey to the appellant, Parker, namely: (a) That the said timbered lands were embraced in his purchase, and (b) that the land fronted on the road mentioned for something like a mile, were untrue. The timbered lands belonged to three other parties and therefore the appellants acquired no title to them under their deed of February 12, 1926. The frontage on the road mentioned was thus reduced from a mile to a quarter of a mile.

[597]*597In March, 1929, the appellants filed their bill of complaint asking for a rescission of the said deed on account of the said false representations made by Storey. The Federal Land Bank was made a party defendant, but after filing its answer disclaiming any interest in the subject matter of the litigation it was dismissed.

The other appellees filed their answer denying all charges of fraud and misrepresentation and asserting as a defense that they were not responsible for the misrepresentations made by Storey; that in making said misrepresentations Storey was not acting as their agent but was acting under a contract of option and if the appellees were responsible for the said misrepresentations they had been ratified by the appellant, W. G. Parker.

By agreement of the parties by counsel the evidence was heard in open court, and the trial court in its opinion decided that Storey was the agent of the appellees; that he made false representations to Parker regarding the timbered land and the road frontage, which said representations were material and induced him to make the purchase; that the appellees were responsible for the conduct of their agent, Storey, in this regard, but, inasmuch as Parker had paid the installment of $175.00 to the Federal Land Bank under its mortgage after he had knowledge of the fraud, that he had thereby ratified the fraud of the appellees’ agent, Storey, and had elected to affirm the transaction. The trial court further decided that neither the payment of the $300.00 note to the Bank of Lunenburg nor the payment of the insurance premium constituted a ratification.

The evidence abundantly sustains the fraudulent representations alleged in the bill. Storey admits in his testimony that he misrepresented the timber lands as being embraced in the tract and that he misrepresented the extent of the road frontage, and counsel for the appellees in their brief admit that Storey misrepresented the boundary lines to [598]*598Parker in this language: “Storey in showing the land to the appellants was mistaken as to the boundaries and showed to the appellants certain lands which were not included in the boundaries described in the deed from the appellees.”

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.E. 884, 157 Va. 592, 1932 Va. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-inge-va-1932.