Rorer Iron Co. v. Trout

2 S.E. 713, 83 Va. 397, 1887 Va. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 16, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 2 S.E. 713 (Rorer Iron Co. v. Trout) 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
Rorer Iron Co. v. Trout, 2 S.E. 713, 83 Va. 397, 1887 Va. LEXIS 86 (Va. 1887).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

after stating the facts in the foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the court.

1st. The first assignment of error is, that the bill attempts to set up a cotemporaneous parol agreement, essentially different from and in conflict with the written agreement which was signed and sealed by the parties, for which reason it is insisted the demurrer should have been sustained.

This assignment is clearly founded on a misconception, and is wholly untenable. The bill does not s.et up a different agreement from that contained in the deed of lease, but avers that the deed of lease was itself procured by fraudulent misrepresentations. These representations were of material things well calculated to, and doubtless did, induce the complainants to execute the lease to Lewis and Preston, thereby seriously encumbering a very valuable property without any corresponding benefit to the lessors. The false representations thus made by the lessees, and by means of which an unconscionable advantage was taken of the lessors, were of matters peculiarly within the knowledge of the lessees, and on which the lessors relied and acted, as they had the right to do• and they were deceived and injured by them, because they were false. These false representations were not held out as opinions merely, but were positive affirmations especially adapted to the end in view, which was to obtain the lease of the mining privileges aforesaid. By these means they obtained the deed of lease, but the lessors got nothing in return. And it is on this ground that the suit was brought to annul the deed. It is of every-day occurrence that courts of equity cancel [407]*407contracts on such grounds. See 1 Story’s Eq., § 193, note; Smith v. Richards, 13 Peters 26; Adams’ Eq., p. 177; 2 Parsons on Con. 177; Grimm v. Byrd, 32 Gratt. 302; Linhart v. Foreman, 77 Va. 540. In the last named case, at page 545, Hinton, J., said : “ It is not necessary that the misrepresentation should be the sole cause of the transaction ; it is enough that it may have constituted a material inducement.” And in Low v. Trundle, 78 Va. 65, the same judge said: “If one represents as true what is false, in such a way as to induce a reasonable man to believe it, and the representation is meant to be acted upon, and he to Whom the representation is made, believing it to be true, acts on it, and thereby sustains damage, there is ground to support an action of deceit at law, and to found a rescission of the transaction in equity.”

It matters not whether the party making the representation knew it to be false or not, so the other party relied and acted on it, as he had a right to do, without further enquiry. Brown v. Rice, 26 Gratt. 473; McMullen v. Saunders, 79 Va. 356.

2d. It is assigned for error that “ the bill should have been dismissed at the hearing upon the complainants’ own testimony.”

This assignment presents in a double aspect the proposition announced in the first assignment of error. In one sense, it imputes error to the circuit court in overruling the demurrer and holding that the allegations set forth in the bill made a proper case for equitable relief. In the other sense, it imputes error to that court in holding that the case made by the bill had been sustained by the evidence. The first aspect of the contention has been already sufficiently considered. But it is insisted for the appellant that the alleged representations were of matters of expectation or opinion only, and not of matters of fact; and Kerr on F. & M., p. 82, is cited as authority for the position [408]*408that such representations “go for nothing, though they may not be true, as a man is not justified in placing reliance on them.” But, on pp. 80-1, the same author says: “ Ho man can coihplain, that another has relied too implicitly on the truth of what he himself states.” And so, too, this court held in Hull v. Fields & Thomas, 76 Va. 594.

In Grimm v. Byrd, supra, Staples, J., said: “But even a matter of opinion may amount to an affirmation, and be an inducement to a contract, especially where the parties are not dealing upon equal terms, and one of them has, or is presumed to have, means of information not equally open to the other.”

However, it is only necessary to recall the representations already set forth, in order to refute the contention that they are merely of “such matters of expectation and opinion as go for nothing, though untrue.” Briefly restated, the case in hand is this: The lessees, Lewis and Preston, go to the lessors, Trout and wife, representing that they are about entering upon extensive operations in mining and marketing ores; that they have the means at hand for successfully working a force . capable of mining and transporting such a quantity of ore daily that the royalty thereon would, at ten cents per ton, yield the owners of the property not less than ten dollars per day, collectible every night, if desired, and promising to commence operations in sixty days. Upon these representations they secure a lease for twenty years, but utterly fail to comply with their promises, and, when sued for a rescission of the contract thus procured, they come saying for defense, “ these representations were mere matters of opinion, and not representations made to induce the contract, or upon which the lessors had a right to rely.” To countenance such a defense would be in effect to absolve men from that which is the chief bond of society—open, honest dealing between man and man.

[409]*409That the averments of the bill that said' lessées made these representations are true, satisfactorily appears from the evidence in the cause; and that they were relied on and chiefly induced the lessors to make the lease, which has proved so disastrous to them, cannot be doubted by any impartial mind. These representations were made immediately previous to the execution of the lease, and the fact that they were not embodied in the writing makes ■them none the less reprehensible, or less likely to deceive and cheat. And certain it is, they were the inducements by which the lease was obtained. Nor are they in conflict with anything in the written instrument of lease. The: lease was for a term of twenty years; yet, looking to its nature and object, it cannot be contended that the lessees had the option to work or not to work the ore mines for an indefinite time, and thus convert what was designed to yield a handsome daily income to the lessors into a mere barren incumbrance on his land, a cloud on his title, an incubus and a manacle which would oppress him and ■destroy the marketable value of his land. No lease of land for a rent, for a return to the landlord out of the land which passes, can be construed to be intended to enable the tenant merely to hold the lease for purposes of speculation, without doing and performing in connection therewith what the lease contemplated. Such a construction would indeed make all such contracts a snare for the entrapment and injury of the unwary land-owner. A man buying and paying for laud may do with it as he likes— work it, or let it lie idle. But a tenant to whom land passes for a specified purpose has no such discretion; he must perform what he stipulated to do; and if he has obtained the lease by misrepresentation and fraud, the lessor may have it rescinded in equity. For these reasons this assignment is untenable.

3d. The third assignment is, “that the circuit court erred

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.E. 713, 83 Va. 397, 1887 Va. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rorer-iron-co-v-trout-va-1887.