Sparks v. Dawson

47 Tex. 138
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 47 Tex. 138 (Sparks v. Dawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sparks v. Dawson, 47 Tex. 138 (Tex. 1877).

Opinion

Roberts, Chief Justice.

The principal question in this case is, Did the court err m the charge given, and m refusing the charge asked by the plaintiff? The evidence was conflicting, each party having adduced ample evidence in [143]*143support of the cause of action on the one hand, and of the ■ defense on the other. If, therefore, there is no error in the charge of the court, by which the jury was misled, the verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant cannot he disturbed. But the fact that there is in the case so direct a conflict, so well sustained on each side, renders it very important that the jury should have been furnished with the correct rule of law, in determining the proper result to be arrived at in finding their verdict.

The written instruments, executed by the parties respectively in making the trade, intrinsically considered, would determine the case in favor of the defendant, upon the supposition that each party had fulfilled the terms thereof, which might be presumed, unless the contrary was made to appear. The object of this suit, on the part of the plaintiff, is to show that they have not been fulfilled on the part of the defendant, and that there are collateral facts, not embraced in the written instruments, in connection with, and constituting part of the trade, which authorize Mm to demand a rescission of the contract, as claimed by Mm in this suit. Those facts were, in substance, that Dawson represented his stock of cattle to consist of eight hundred head, including one hundred beeves; that plaintiff had no opportunity of examining the stock for himself; that he relied upon the said representations of defendant in making the trade; that said representations were false, there not being one half of the stock in quantity and quality as represented; that the stock of cattle constituted the principal inducement to plaintiff to make the trade; that he, plaintiff', was deceived by said misrepresentations of defendant; that he was greatly injured thereby, in being induced to sell to the defendant a valuable tract of seven hundred acres of land, upon the Brazos river, well improved, valued at five thousand dollars, and really worth ten thousand dollars, for a stock ranch, consisting of one hundred and sixty acres of land, not worth more than one dollar per acre, and the stock of cattle so materially misrepresented, from which he has [144]*144received no benefit, and which he has abandoned, not being able to find the same; and that defendant intentionally made said misrepresentations to defraud the plaintiff in the trade.

The court charged the jury as follows: “ Before you can find for the plaintiff', he must satisfy your minds, beyond a reasonable and well-founded doubt, that the defendant did not have the number and quality of cattle upon the range that the defendant sold him. It devolves upon the plaintiff to make the proof, to satisfy your minds, that the defendant did not have the stock that- he represented and sold to plaintiff ; and not until the plaintiff shows conclusively, by evidence, that the defendant deceived and defrauded him, can the defendant be called upon to introduce any evidence at all.” This is the portion of the charge in which the court endeavored to inform the jury as to the degree of conviction which must be upon their minds, before finding a verdict for the plaintiff, and there is no other portion of the charge which modifies the rule of moral certainty thus required, the same as is required in criminal cases.

The counsel for the plaintiff asked the court to charge the jury “ that a preponderance of testimony is all that is required in civil causes, and that, while fraud cannot be presumed, it is proven as any other fact,” which was refused by the court. "In this charge, we are of opinion that the court materially erred in this case.

The expression so often used in argument, and in charges and otherwise, that “ fraud cannot be presumed, but must be proved,” should never he contained in a charge given to a jury, because it is not true without a qualification, which a jury is not capable of supplying. It seems to have been the object of the plaintiff to supply the qualification by the expression, “it is proven as any other fact.” Why may it not be proved as any other fact ? There is no fixed definition of fraud. It consists of, and depends upon, the existence of a certain combination of facts in each case. The facts in relation to the misrepresentations made by the defendant, as [145]*145alleged by the plaintiff in this case, constitute fraud. There is nothing peculiar about them that should require other and different proof to establish them than that which is required to establish the facts which are necessary to constitute a cause of action or defense in any other civil cause. ¡Nor is there anything in them which should require any stronger conviction in the minds of the jury of their having been established by'the evidence, than that which is required to maintain or defend any other cause of action in civil causes. There should be adduced for the party holding the affirmative of an issue such a preponderance of evidence as will satisfy the minds of the jiuy to a reasonable certainty, but not to an absolute moral certainty, of the truth of the facts alleged. Dor instance, in this case the fact that the defendant made to the plaintiff a certain representation as to the number and quality of his stock of cattle in the range, being one of the material facts alleged as constituting the fraud in the trade, must be established by such a preponderance of evidence as to fix in the minds of the jury a reasonable certainty of its existence as a fact in the case. And so, the like rule applies to the establishment of the fact alleged, that the representation was materially false, as well as to all the other alleged facts necessary to establish the fraud in the trade.

But to require these facts to be established by evidence with that absolute certainty which fixes in the minds of the jury a conviction that excludes all reasonable doubt of their existence, as if it were a case of murder or treason, is not a rule applicable to this or any other civil cause. As stated in a case lately decided by this court, this expression about a jury being satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt, from its frequent application in criminal cases, is understood to require a degree of certainty in evidence necessary to establish a fact, and a degree of conviction upon the minds of the jury of the existence of such fact, which are not applicable to a civil cause, and that the use of it in such civil cause was well cal[146]*146ciliated to mislead a jury. (Markham v. Carothers, Adminstrator, ante, p. 21.)

In a case involving the question of the character of evidence necessary to establish fraud, Justice Wheeler said:' “ There is no such rule of evidence or principle of law as that, in order to authorize a jury to deduce, from circumstantial evidence, the conclusion of fraud, the circumstances must be of so conclusive a nature and tendency as to exclude every other hypothesis than the one sought to be established.” (Linn v. Wright, 18 Tex., 337.)

In elementary books, and in reported eases, very strong expressions have often been used in the endeavor to define the certainty to be arrived at in the establishment of a fraud.

They may be serviceable to guard the mind against the assumption of the existence of fraud upon mere suspicion, or upon the mere unfavorable aspect of the transaction, without competent proof of facts necessary to establish it.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Tex. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparks-v-dawson-tex-1877.