Sohan v. Gibson

80 S.W. 1173, 118 Ky. 403, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 S.W. 1173 (Sohan v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sohan v. Gibson, 80 S.W. 1173, 118 Ky. 403, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 51 (Ky. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion op the court by

JUDGE SETTLE

Reversing

The appellant, George W. Sohan, sold and conveyed to the [405]*405appellee, Annie M. Gibson 31 1-2 acres of land in Hardin county, and a lot of personal property, consisting of two horses, one surrey and harness, sixteen head of hogs and shoats, two cows and calves, all the fowls on hand, one range, a child’s bed, and a set of dining chairs. The consideration for the sale of the land and personal property mentioned was $2,000, $1,400 of which appellee paid in cash upon receiving the deed, and for the remaining $600 she executed to the appellant her three several notes, of $200 each, with interest from date, payable in one, two, and three years, respectively, secured by lien upon the land. The deed contained a provision to the effect that, if appellee failed to pay the first note when due, the remaining two notes were to become due and payable. After’ the maturity of the first note, and the failure of appellee to pay it, this action was instituted by appellant upon all three of the notes, and to enforce the lien retained in the deed to secure their payment. Appellee, Annie M.- Gibson, resisted the payment of the notes, and, by answer and counterclaim, asked a rescission of the contract upon the ground that at and before the purchase of the land, and for the purpose of inducing her to make the same, the appellant falsely and knowingly represented to her that the land was fertile and very productive; that it would produce during an ordinary season 50 bushels of com per acre; that there were 35 acres in the survey; that the land did not wash; and that the cellar under the house on the premises was healthful — all of which representations were alleged to be false, and known by appellant at the time to be false, but were then unknown to appellee to be false. The answer further avers that the appellee Annie M. Gibson and her husband were not familiar with farming lands, and were unable to judge of the quality of ihe land sold them by appellant, and for that reason she relied upon [406]*406and was induced by his alleged false representations to purchase the land of him. The affirmative averments of the answer and counterclaim were denied by reply, and, upon the submission of the case, the chancellor rendered judgment canceling the notes sued on, and dismissing the action, at appellant’s cost. Of that judgment he complains; hence - this appeal.

Appellee does not seriously rely upon the alleged shortage in acreage. Indeed, it is apparent that there is no merit in this part of her defense, for it is not likely that appellant represented that the farm contained 35 acres, when the deed from his vendor stated that it contained only 31 1-2 acres; and, moreover, appellee offered no objection to the deed made her by appellant, which also gives the number of acres of the land conveyed as 31 1-2, and thereby informed her of that fact.

Appellee’s proof seems to have been directed more particularly to the other alleged misrepresentations set forth in her answer. We think the evidence tends to prove the following state of facts:

(1) That appellant advertised his land through his Louisville agent, W. H. Pipes, whose deposition appears in the record, in which it is denied that any misrepresentations were made by him as to the land, or through the advertisement. Upon the contrary, it appears from his deposition that, after appellee and her husband looked at the land, they told him they thought it exactly as represented by him, and that it was the only place they had seen advertised that came up to the advertisement.

(2) It also appears from the evidence that before appellee, who lived in Louisville, purchased the land of appellant, she went with her brother-in-law, Britt, to look at it, and did in fact with him inspect it, or have ample opportunity to do [407]*407so, and that Britt later, and before her purchase of the farm, went with appellee’s husband to see it. Britt testified that the place, in his opinion, came up to the representations contained in the advertisement; that, being a contractor and builder, he, at appellee’s request, estimated the value of the buildings on the land, which he found to be worth $1,000. This witness further testified that, before the consummation of the trade between appellee and appellant, he talked with and drew the check of the former for the $1,400 which she paid for the land when the deed was received by her from.appellant, and he then advised her that, if she was not thoroughly satisfied with the farm, the time to make her objections was before, and not after, the trade was made, but she was then satisfied; and the witness also testified that appellant made no such representations as claimed by appellee. The appellant himself states with great positiveness in his deposition that no such misrepresentations were made by him.

(3) It further appears that appellant himself had paid $1,735 for the land when he purchased it, and that the personal property which he sold appellee with the land was "worth $300.

As against these facts, we find the testimony of the appellee to the effect that appellant did represent the land to be productive, and that it would produce 50 bushels of corn per acre; that it did not wash; and that the cellar of the house was dry. Three or four other witnesses introduced by appellee testified that the land was poor and unproductive, and not worth, buildings included, exceeding $600.

Taking the evidence all together, however, we are of opinion it conduces to prove that whatever representations were made to appellee by appellant with reference to the quality and value of the land were mere expressions of opinion, not [408]*408Intended to defraud or deceive, nor calculated to do so, and that appellee had every opportunity and means at hand to discover their truth or falsity. Moreover, the circumspection manifested by her in looking at the land herself, having her husband and brother-in-law, Britt, to inspect it —the latter the second time — demonstrates that she was not misled by any misrepresentations of appellant, and that she did not rely thereon.

Inadequacy of price, alone, or the payment by the purchaser of a greater price than the thing pui*chased Is worth, will not authorize a rescission of the contract, and did not justify the cancellation' of the notes sued on. It must further and satisfactorily appear that appellant, in making the sale, was guilty of actual fraud, or at least of such unfair conduct as put appellee at a disadvantage. It is manifest that the chancellor, in deciding this case, proceeded upon the sole theory that appellant had, exclusive of the notes sued on received as much as, in the chancellor's opinion, the farm was worth. This, in our opinion, was not a proper .ground upon which to base the judgment. It was not the province of the chancellor to modify or change the contract between the parties merely because it was to the undue advantage cf one, or the disadvantage of the other.

In Livermore v. Middlesboro Town & Land Co., 106 Ky., 140. 50 S. W. 6, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 1704, in discussing this subject this court said: “To establish actionable fraud, or fraud against which equity will relieve, ... it must appear that the misrepresentation was of a matter of material fact, as distinguished from opinion, at the time or previously existing, and not a mere promise for the future; must be relied on by the person whose action is intended to be influenced; and must be made with knowledge of its falsity, or under circumstances which did not justify a belief in its truth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 S.W. 1173, 118 Ky. 403, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sohan-v-gibson-kyctapp-1904.