Slack v. Bragg

76 A. 148, 83 Vt. 404, 1910 Vt. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 9, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 76 A. 148 (Slack v. Bragg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slack v. Bragg, 76 A. 148, 83 Vt. 404, 1910 Vt. LEXIS 209 (Vt. 1910).

Opinion

Powers, J.

The two counts of this declaration are in case and therefore properly joined. They follow the form given in 2 Chitty 679, as did those in Caldbeck v. Simanton, 82 Vt. 69, which were held to be in the tort form. It was pointed out in that case that at an early day assumpsit and case came to be concurrent remedies for a breach of warranty in the sale of personal property; that the recognition of these remedies as concurrent led to the adoption of a form of declaration designed to enable a plaintiff to recover for a false warranty or false representation as his case might develop; that such a declaration was adopted in Beeman v. Buck, 3 Vt. 53, and that it has since been repeatedly approved; that it was said by Lord Ellenboro in Williamson v. Allison, 2 East 446, that it was the warranty itself that deceived a buyer who relied upon it; and that it was sometimes said that the law implies deceit from the breach of the warranty.

The court declared this proposition untenable, saying, among other things: “There is no plainer distinction in the law than that between breach of warranty and deceit; and the law no more implies deceit from a breach of warranty than it does from a breach of covenant for title or from the non-performance of a contract of suretyship.” This argument and the language in which it was expressed was understandingly and deliberately approved. Its logic is irresistible. But one conclusion is possible ; and that is that in order to recover in case, a plaintiff must allege and prove something more than a broken warranty. The scienter or its equivalent must be charged and established. The tort involved must be actual rather than constructive. Conscious misstatement, haphazard falsehood, intentionally passing off belief for knowledge, and fraudulent suppression of the truth are acts necessarily and essentially tortious, if actionable at all. A broken warranty, innocently made, though it deceives, is necessarily and essentially contractual, only. To treat it as anything more is illogical and unwarranted. It necessarily follows that the first count of this declaration, being without an [408]*408allegation of the scienter, is not sufficient to support a recovery, and so to submit the case to the jury as to allow a recovery under it was error. It also follows that the so-called double aspect declaration can no longer support a recovery unless the scienter or its equivalent be established.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, and again at the close of all the evidence, the defendant moved for a directed verdict on the ground of (1) variance, (2) insufficiency of the declaration, and (3) failure of proof.

The plaintiff says in his brief that the only variance pointed out and passed upon by the trial court pertained to the price paid for the cattle; but the bill of exceptions shows that three grounds of variance were specified and claimed below, as follows:

(a) That it was alleged in the first count that the purchase was of thirteen cows and two heifers for $750; while the proof was that the purchase was of thirteen cows, two heifers and a bull, and that the price was figured at $50 for each of the cows and heifers — the bull being “thrown in.”

(b) That it was alleged in the second count that the purchase was of thirteen cows for $689; while the proof was as just stated.

(c) That it was alleged in the first count that all the cows and heifers were warranted to be fresh in December and January; while the proof was that such warranty only applied to the cows, and that the plaintiff was to “run his chances” as to the heifers.

The first two grounds specify a variance in the statement of the consideration of the contract out of which the cause of action arose; the last, a variance in the false statement on which the action is predicated.

Our disposition of the first count makes it unnecessary to spend any time on the variance first above specified. The count is insufficient and if amended it will stand like the second so far as the allegation and proof of consideration are concerned. Nor need we consider the ground last above specified — for the allegation referred to only applies to the thirteen cows, and does not cover the heifers as claimed.

The common law rule required great accuracy in the statement of the consideration of the contract on which an action was predicated. It was to be explicitly and correctly stated; and if any part of an entire consideration, or one consisting of several [409]*409things was omitted or misstated, the variance was fatal. 1 Chitty PI. (14th Am. Ed.) *299. In declaring in assumpsit on a contract not under seal, it was necessary to state so much of it as contained the entire consideration, and the entire act or duty to be done in virtue of such consideration, the breach of which was complained of. Note to Symonds v. Carr, 1 Camp. 361; Clark v. Grey, 6 East 564; Miles v. Sheward, 8 East 7; Curley v. Dean, 4 Conn. 259, 10 Am. Dec. 140. This rule was adopted by this Court at an early day. Allen v. Lansing, 10 Vt. 114, was an action of assumpsit alleging that the plaintiff bought of the defendant and his partners a barrel of rum for fifty dollars. The proof was that he bought it for $1.06 per gallon. The variance was held to be fatal.

In Vail v. Strong, 10 Vt. 457, the rule was applied to an action on the case for false warranty in the sale of personal property. The Court said in that case that it was the result of all the authorities that whether the action was in form ex contractu, or ex delicto, if the cause of action as set forth originates in a contract, the contract must be proved as laid. But this is so only in those eases wherein it is necessary to declare upon the contract as the basis of a right of recovery. This is apparent from an attentive examination of the ease. The Court took as an apt illustration eases arising upon a contract for the sale of horses with a warranty or representation of soundness, and pointed out how a plaintiff might declare as for a deceit, alleging a representation known to be false when made — in which case he did not rely upon the contract as a ground of recovery, and none need be so alleged or proved. Or he might declare in special assumpsit on the warranty, in which case he must prove the contract precisely as laid. Or he might declare in the double aspect. It was considered that the representation then under consideration consisted of the false warranty only and that the action was, therefore, founded on the contract, which would have to be proved as laid.

Mallory v. Leach, 35 Vt. 156, was an action on the case for deceit in the purchase of certain shares in a mining company. The plaintiff alleged that she sold the stock to the defendant for $275; the proof was that the defendant paid $94.50 in cash, and gave his note for $290.50 — making in all $385. It was held, in effect, that the variance was immaterial, since it consisted merely [410]*410in alleging the injury occasioned by the fraud to be greater than it turned out to be.

Gotleib v. Leach, 40 Vt. 278, was an action on the case for false representations in the sale of a perpetual motion machine. The allegation was that the plaintiff paid $300 for the machine; the proof was that he paid $350.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Badlam
22 A.2d 161 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1941)
Callahan, B.N.F. v. Disorda
16 A.2d 179 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1940)
Flint Et Ux. v. Davis Et Ux.
8 A.2d 671 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1939)
Newman v. Kendall
154 A. 662 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1931)
Paska v. Saunders
153 A. 451 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1931)
Shields v. Vermont Mutual Fire Insurance
147 A. 352 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1929)
Temple Et Ux. v. Atwood
134 A. 591 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1926)
Dalpe v. Bissette
130 A. 591 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1925)
Parkhurst v. Healy's Estate
122 A. 895 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1923)
State v. Long
115 A. 734 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1922)
Crampton v. Lamonda
114 A. 42 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1921)
Thayer v. Glynn
106 A. 834 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1919)
State v. Felch
105 A. 23 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1918)
In re Estate of Martin
104 A. 100 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1918)
Farmer v. Williams
102 A. 932 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1918)
Stevens v. Blood
96 A. 697 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1916)
Gilfillan v. Gilfillan's Estate
96 A. 704 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1916)
Pierce v. Mitchell
90 A. 577 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1914)
First National Bank v. Bertoli
89 A. 359 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1914)
State v. Pierce
88 A. 740 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A. 148, 83 Vt. 404, 1910 Vt. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slack-v-bragg-vt-1910.