Stone & Wellington v. Robie

66 Vt. 245
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 66 Vt. 245 (Stone & Wellington v. Robie) 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
Stone & Wellington v. Robie, 66 Vt. 245 (Vt. 1894).

Opinion

START, J.

These causes were heard together, and the defendant in each case seeks to avoid his contract because of certain misrepresentations made by the plaintiff’s agent.

The plaintiffs are dealers in nursery stock and, in the case against Robie, their agent represented to the defendant that the stock which McMamanon & Leuchtford had been putting out was worthless, being culled stock received from the plaintiffs by the carload, which the plaintiffs would not sell to their customers ; he also told the defendant that he was almost sure of getting a three hundred dollar order from one Fairbanks. The defendant believed these representations and gave the order in question. The referee finds that the agent felt quite sure that he would get such an order from Fairbanks, and that the representations as to [247]*247stock were mere expressions of opinion ; and he is unable to find whether they were true or false.

In the case against Wilson, the agent called upon the defendant and offered to sell him some nursery stock. The defendant at first declined to purchase, because he was intending to wait for an agent by the name of Butterfield, of whom he had before bought nursery stock. Whereupon the pláintiffs’ agent informed him that Butterfield would not be around that year, as he had taken his place, he and Butterfield working for the same company; and that, if he bought of him he would get the same quality of stock he would if he bought of Butterfield. The defendant relied upon the representations and would not have given the order if they had not been made. The representations were false, but the agent, at the time of making them, believed them to be true.

In the case against Waite the representations were substantially the same as those made in the case against Wilson, and were false, but the agent believed them to be true at the time he made them.

The representations did not relate to the quantity, quality, or value of the articles sold, therefore the defendants cannot avoid their several contracts. To avoid a contract for false representations, the representations must relate distinctly and directly to the contract, must affect its very essence and substance, and must be material to the contract. If the representations relate to other matters, or to the contract in a trivial and unimportant respect only, or are wholly collateral, they afford no ground for avoiding the contract. Long v. Woodman, 58 Me. 49; Medbury v. Watson, 6 Met. 259; Clem v. Newcastle and Danville R. R. Co., 9 Ind. 488 (68 Am. Dec. 653); White v. Shelby R. R. Co., 63 Am. Dec. 522.

It is claimed that no recovery can be had because it does not appear that the contracts were in writing. It is unneces[248]*248sary in these cases to decide whether such contracts are required to be in writing. No exceptions were filed to the several reports of the referee, and it must be assumed that the testimony proving the contracts to have been made was admitted without objection. By not objecting to the testimony when offered, the defendants have waived the objection now urged. Scofield v. Stoddard, 58 Vt. 290; Montgomery v. Edwards, 46 Vt. 151.

The several judgments are affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Vt. 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-wellington-v-robie-vt-1894.