Patzman v. Howey

100 S.W.2d 851, 340 Mo. 11, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 459
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 14, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 100 S.W.2d 851 (Patzman v. Howey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patzman v. Howey, 100 S.W.2d 851, 340 Mo. 11, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 459 (Mo. 1936).

Opinions

This case, coming recently to the writer, is an action to recover the amount paid by plaintiff upon a contract to purchase Florida land. Plaintiff alleged that this contract was induced by fraud and misrepresentation. Plaintiff originally made the W.J. Howey Land Company and the W.J. Howey Company, corporations, defendants, but dismissed as to these corporate defendants and proceeded only against defendant Howey individually. Plaintiff had a jury verdict for $10,226.35, and defendant has appealed from the judgment entered on this verdict.

Plaintiff's petition alleged fraudulent misrepresentations, as follows:

"That to induce plaintiff to purchase said land, the defendants represented to plaintiff that said land was owned by the W.J. Howey Land Company and would produce enormous crops of Natal hay and *Page 16 citrus fruits; that said land was fertile and adapted to continuous cultivation in its then condition; that defendants would open up and establish rock highways to and by said land, and that defendant, W.J. Howey Land Company, had good title to said land, or was in position to then deliver fee simple title to said land to plaintiff."

Defendant contends that his demurrer to the evidence at the close of the case should have been sustained and this requires a statement of the facts from the view of the testimony most favorable to plaintiff.

Plaintiff, a dentist in Kansas City, was, in December, 1915, interested in Florida land owned by the W.J. Howey Land Company by its Kansas City agents Johnson, Major and Tutt. Plaintiff testified:

"I was invited over to Howey's offices where Dr. Major and Mr. Tutt showed some pictures of Florida and what they intended to do and were doing in Lake County, Florida, and what they had done in some other parts of Florida and told about the wonderful development there, and that Howey owned thousands of acres of land in Lake County, Florida, and that they were developing this for Natal hay and citrus fruits, and that they were anxious for me to go down there and select a piece of land right near the townsite of Howey, which would double in value or more in a few years' time, and that they were going to build a railroad in there within the — within that year and some rock roads, and there is a rock road called the Dixie Highway, was to extend right by the eighty acres of land that they showed me, and that if I would purchase this ground and pay them a quarter down, which was $1,500.00, they would give me a contract for this Natal grass or Natal hay, that two-thirds of the crop would make the other quarter payment so that all I would have to pay down would be $1,500.00 and then pay them for seed and caring for this Natal hay, so I went down there."

Plaintiff was furnished with literature describing the land company's project. There were statements in it to the effect that the land was owned by the W.J. Howey Land Company, and plaintiff positively testified that the agents represented to him that this company "owned the land." The literature stated that "Negotiations are now pending" for railroad extensions through the land; and also stated: "Hard-surfaced roads now under construction by the Commissioners of Lake County, and those to be built by the Company as connecting links, will provide the entire tract of 80,000 acres with splendid highways." The literature further stated: "The development of this famous ridge land of Lake County is to be the closing work in Florida of the Howey Land Company. When this became known the business associates of Mr. W.J. Howey, the active head and general manager of the Company, petitioned that the town now being built to serve this project be named Howey." There was also *Page 17 literature with the following caption: "A conservative estimate of what can be accomplished at the end of a period of four years' development of 40 acres planted to Natal hay, on the Howey Lands in Lake Co., Florida." This was followed by computations of annual income and expense which showed that land purchased at $75 per acre and cleared and planted in Natal hay at $30 per acre would (if it produced three tons per acre which sold at $20 per ton and cost $5 per ton to cut, bale and market) during a period of four years, accomplish the following: "Results — Total amount of cash invested $1950; forty acres of land fully paid for and planted to Natal hay, and at the end of four years we have $4680, cash on hand, and an annual net income of $1800, or a monthly income of $150." If this could be accomplished it was only necessary to pay for seeding and hire some one to market the hay; then the land would pay for itself and pension the owner besides.

The land company agent Johnson testified concerning the literature showing how the land could be paid for in hay, as follows:

"Q. Where did you get those papers? A. From the Chicago office of the W.J. Howey Land Company. . . . Q. Did you ever talk to Mr. Howey about them? A. Yes, sir. . . . Mr. Howey called our attention to the raising of Natal hay on the land in Lake County, Florida, and furnished us with these circulars to show what could be done with Natal hay, that it was a profitable crop that that land would produce. Q. What were those figures based upon? . . . If you were told by Mr. Howey . . . A. That they were based upon the experience of thousands who had raised Natal hay in that part of Florida."

Plaintiff went with his family to visit his wife's relatives who lived near Kissimmee, Florida, about seventy miles south of where the land company was locating its town of Howey. By previous arrangement, Johnson, accompanied by a local man named Bryson, came to Kissimmee in an automobile and drove plaintiff and his wife to the Howey townsite where they stayed two nights in a tent. Plaintiff said:

"They took us on to Leesburg, I think on the other side of the lake, and showed us some developments of the country, some one or two Natal hay fields and some fruit groves. . . . Then the next day we went out over this tract of land of Howey's. . . . They took us out over this land and showed me 160 acres and wanted me to purchase that. . . . We drove over the ground and walked over some of it, and there was a lot of brush and timber and such as that on it, and then they showed me some cleared right near there, and they said `that is the way they could clear this up,' so we went back to Howey or to the tents there where the townsite of Howey was to be, and I signed an option to purchase 160 acres or any part of it that I wanted." *Page 18

Johnson drove plaintiff back to Kissimmee again, and when he returned to Kansas City he executed a contract dated December 28, 1915, for the purchase of eighty acres for $6000. For this purchase price, plaintiff paid $1500 in cash and executed three $1500 notes due in one, two, and three years. Plaintiff paid over $1000 on the note due in one year. He also paid out $2753.36 to Bryson for clearing the land and seeding it in Natal grass during the year 1916, but the hay crop from the Natal grass only produced about seven tons that year. Plaintiff said that he paid Bryson to have the hay cut, baled and delivered to market but "they baled it up in the field and let it rot; they never delivered it anywhere." In February, 1917, plaintiff went to Florida with his two brothers, who were given some work by the land company and thereafter during that year bought from the land company a 10-acre tract about two miles from plaintiff's land.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.2d 851, 340 Mo. 11, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patzman-v-howey-mo-1936.