Porter v. Beattie

59 N.W. 499, 88 Wis. 22, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 24
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 59 N.W. 499 (Porter v. Beattie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. Beattie, 59 N.W. 499, 88 Wis. 22, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 24 (Wis. 1894).

Opinion

Cassoday, J.

The trial court failed to find the value of the land conveyed. Mr. Ehr readily agreed to take $2,600 therefor, less two per cent, commission for making the sale. There is nothing to indicate that he ever expected to get any more, nor that in his judgment it was worth any more. There is some evidence that it was not worth as much. It seems quite certain that it was not worth any more.

Beattie was to have all he could get over the $2,600, as well as the commissions named. Beattie had been in the real-estate business at Portage for about thirty years. Living thus about two miles from the farm, and being in that business, we may fairly assume that he knew all about its value. It does not appear that Beattie made any attempt to sell the farm to any one living in the vicinity of it and likely to know its real quality, character, and value. [27]*27His first move toward selling the same, apparently, was to enlist Unger, of Marshall, Dane county, in the enterprise, presumably with the view of securing a purchaser in the vicinity of Unger’s residence. The price was fixed by Beattie at $4,000, and Unger was to receive for his services in procuring such purchaser six per cent, on the sale, to wit, the sum of $240. Accordingly, Beattie and Unger had an interview, and Beattie furnished Unger with what purported to be a full description of the farm thus proposed to be sold, substantially as stated in Exhibit A, set forth in the foregoing statement, with the portion thereof constituting the plat having one cplor to express plow land, another to express hay land, and another to express timber land. Beattie at first testified that he never saw that plat, and did not know in . whose handwriting Exhibit A was, and sought to’create the impression that he was’.in no way responsible for anything contained in that exhibit. But on cross-examination he was finally compelled to testify to the effect that he wrote out a description of the land, and drew a plat thereof in different colors with pencils, representing the plow land, timber land, and hay land, and the line of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad and the Portage road, on it, and gave the same to Unger; that he had never tried to find that plat, although a copy of Exhibit A was served upon him with the complaint in this action; that he made the plat and statements he gave to Unger to sell the land, and as a kind of representation of the land; that he could not tell, at first, wherein the plat he so made differed from the one on Exhibit A, but finally did not think it represented the timber land north of the highway as extending so far west; that he gave to Unger all the statements contained in Exhibit A, except that the “ buildings are new and first-class.” These admissions were drawn from Beattie on cross-examination, in fragments, and were severally made with a hesitancy and prevarication indica[28]*28tive of a conscious desire to suppress such facts as might be damaging to the defense. There is nothing to indicate that Unger knew anything about the land, except such knowledge as he obtained from Beattie. In fact, it does not appear that he was at that time a dealer in real estate, but the reverse.

Upon receiving the descriptions, plat, and statements from Beattie, Unger appears to have gone at once to Williams, a real-estate dealer at Waterloo, and engaged him to aid in finding a purchaser for the land, and agreed to give Williams therefor one half of his commissions,— that is to say $120; and he thereupon left with Williams Exhibit A, as a true description of the farm to be sold. Williams thereupon advertised in the Waterloo Democrat for those wishing to buy farms to call at his office and, among others, examine this plat. The plaintiff saw the notice, and in pursuance of it went to Williams’ office. He was there shown Exhibit A, and examined it carefully. It presented an attractive bargain, and so the old man agreed with Williams to go with him and look at the farm. Unger resided only four miles from Waterloo; and, as he was not then in the real-estate business, it is fair to assume that he had already agreed with Beattie to put the matter, in the hands of Williams to secure a purchaser. In fact the trial court finds that Beattie employed Williams to assist in selling the lands, and that “ Williams had a plat in his possession purporting to represent the said farm,” thereby referring to Exhibit A. We must assume that Beattie was the author of that plat and all that is contained in Exhibit A, and that he made and devised the same for the sole purpose of securing a purchaser of the farm at a price $1,400-higher than was asked by the owner.

With such knowledge as the plaintiff obtained from Williams and Exhibit A, he and Williams Avent to Portage. They got there in the afternoon, and after dinner they and [29]*29Beattie visited the farm. At evening the plaintiff returned -to Beatties house, and remained with him all night, but •did not agree to buv the farm until some days thereafter. The plaintiff had never seen the farm, nor been in the •vicinity of it, before. He knew nothing about it, therefore, except what he saw that afternoon, and what he was told by BeatUe and "Williams, and the facts and representations made in Exhibit A. The statement of facts and representations contained in that exhibit were grossly and -confessedly false in several particulars. The exhibit stated that the farm contained 272 acres, whereas Mr. Ehr was •the owner of only 254 acres. The exhibit described about ninety-five acres which Ehr did not own, and this is found as a fact by the trial court, the same being made up of the two pieces described in italic letters in the portion of the foregoing statement setting forth that exhibit. The exhibit only described 214 acres of the land which Mr. Ehr •did own, and entirely failed to describe or mention forty acres -which he owned; and this is found as a fact by the trial court; and the same are described in the deed to the plaintiff and in italic letters in the foregoing statement. The railroad is located on the exhibit substantially in the right place, but it falsely represents the Portage road or public highway as running directly west on the town line from the S. W. córner of the S. E. of section 34, whereas, •in 'truth and in fact, it runs some 30-odd degrees south of west from that point, or a little east of it. Between that road and the town line on the north is a three-cornered piece of land, containing about ten acres, on .the north side of the N. E. ■£ of the N. W. \ of section 3, mentioned in the deed. The land conveyed to the plaintiff extended south •of the town line for. three quarters of a mile, the southern •end of which extends nearly to the river, and the southern portion of the same is very much the poorest portion of the farm; and there is where thirty acres is located [30]*30which was not described on Exhibit A. Exhibit A describes the portion of the farm on the north side of the town line as extending from the east line of section 34 to the west line of that section,— a distance of one mile,— with a strip twenty-five or thirty rods wide,along the west side of the S. "W. J of the S. "W. J of section 34, designated thereon, as timber land, whereas, in truth and in fact, that portion of the farm did not extend as far west, into eighty rods; and along the west side of the E. of the S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.W. 499, 88 Wis. 22, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-beattie-wis-1894.