Taylor v. Fleet

4 Barb. 95
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 4 Barb. 95 (Taylor v. Fleet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Fleet, 4 Barb. 95 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1848).

Opinion

Strong, P. J.

Parol evidence adduced to rescind a sale of real estate, on the ground of fraud or mistake, where the sale has been consummated by a conveyance, ought not to prevail unless it amounts to strong and conclusive proof. Our laws very properly require that every contract for the sale of any lands, or of any interest in lands, shall be in writing, and that, except [97]*97when an estate or interest in lands passes by operation of law, no such estate or interest, other than leases for a term not exceeding one year, shall be created, granted, assigned, surrendered or declared, except by a deed or conveyance in writing. It is also well settled that all verbal propositions made during a negotiation which ends in a written contract are merged in the writing. That in general excludes all other evidence. The admission of oral evidence to prove fraud, or a mistake, in a written contract, is based on the ground that either may, if sufficiently extensive, avoid the contract altogether. Still the admission of oral evidence, depending as it does upon the recollection of witnesses, and sometimes colored by their partialities, seems to be a departure from the safe principle to which I have alluded, and can be justified only from necessity. The danger of admitting such evidence, and the little reliance which can be placed upon it, are illustrated by the case now under consideration. The principal ground on which the purchaser relies to set aside the sale, is that the vendor untruly and fraudulently represented during their negotiations, that the land in question “ was full as early, if not earlier, than any other land on the west end of Long Island, and was as well adapted to the raising of all sorts of early vegetables, fruits and market produce, as any other land on that end of the island.” The purchaser introduced two witnesses to prove this alleged misrepresentation. The first, (Henry A. Ovington, who is his brother-in-law,) testified that Fleet the vendor “ represented the land as being the best adapted for the purpose we wanted it for, raising early vegetables for theNew-York market,” and also said “ there was no earlier land any where about.” This witness was then in negotiation with Fleet for the purchase of another tract of land in the same neighborhood, and he told Fleet in the presence of Healy, a broker, who had something to do with the matter, that his object was to get the earliest land that could he had, and Healy said it was just the land the witness ought to have. The other witness, (William H. Ovington, who was the son of the first,) testified that he was a clerk in the office where the negotiations between his father and [98]*98uncle and Fleet were conducted, and was generally present at their conversations ; that it was stated that Mr. Taylor’s object was to procure the earliest land that could be obtained for the purpose of market gardening, and that he heard Fleet say that this land is as early as any that could be obtained. This witness, on his cross-examination, says “ I think Mr. Fleet’s words were, it is the earliest land that can be obtained.” The learned justice who heard and decided these cases at the special term, seems to think that the representations mentioned by these witnesses are substantially the same, and that they prove the-charge contained in the bill. In this I differ from him. There may have been a great difference between the earliest of all the lands on the west end of Long Island, and of those which were for sale. Indeed there is strong reason to suppose that such was the fact. There is no evidence that any of the shore lands which were proved to have been earlier than the land in question were for sale, although some of the witnesses were questioned on the subject. Henry A. Ovington said he found no such land for sale. If the representation made by Fleet was that his was the earliest land which could be obtained, and there was none earlier for sale, it would have been literally true, and as that land is described by two of the witnesses as early, the representation would form no legitimate subject of complaint. Taylor may have misunderstood it, but that would have been his misfortune. As he could have no remedy for any mistake of his own, not caused by any misrepresentations of, or concealment by, Fleet, the testimony of William H. Ovington, if it is to be believed, would be fatal to the application to rescind the sale. One remark made by Henry A. Ovington would seem to confirm the testimony of his son. He says that his object.was the same as Mr. Taylor’s, and that was to procure the earliest land that could be had. If these two witnesses differed, as they evidently did, one proving a representation favorable, and the other unfavorable, to Mr. Taylor, as they were both introduced by him, and from all that appears were equally intelligent, and had'the same opportunities for hearing, it would seem to be no more than right to [99]*99consider the testimony as balanced, and then the charge in the bill would fall, from a want of proof.

The other charges in the bill are destitute of proof, and no reliance was placed upon them, either by the learned judge at the special term, or the counsel who argued the case in behalf of Mr. Taylor here. If, however, the testimony of Henry A. Ovington is taken in preference to that of his son, there is nothing to establish the charge of fraud against Fleet. He had not resided on the land, but had managed it principally by a farmer who had worked it upon shares. His own place of residence was at Brooklyn, which was some four or five miles distant. True he had owned it several years, and had shared in the rents and profits, and if the difference between the early productiveness of that land, and the lands generally on that end of the island, had been such as essentially to diminish the prof its, it would probably have been known to him. If, however, a few only of the farms in that neighborhood had been so early as to form exceptions in that particular to the land on that end of the island, he might have been ignorant of the fact. The proof is, that although the land in that vicinity extending from the shore to some quarter of a mile in the interior was from a week to ten days earlier, yet that the land in question was early compared with the lands generally on that part of the island. George Pool, who had worked the place from 1837 to 1842, and John Pool, who was head workman for Mr. Taylor from March until August, both give it that character, and there is no witness who differs from them. Taylor, too, was to take immediate possession of the dwelling house, (in August,) agreeably to the contract, and could have easily ascertained the falsity of any deceptive recommendation before the deed was to be given, which was on the first day of the following March. From all this it may be naturally inferred that Fleet did not make- the representations attributed to him, whatever they may have been, in bad faith. Fraud should be clearly proved, not inferred from slight presumptions.'

There can be no doubt that Taylor was disappointed when he found that there was other land which produced earlier [100]*100crops than his. But the facts do not show that his disappointment for that cause was very great, or that it gave him any very serious cause for complaint against Fleet. He agreed to purchase the place on the 15th of August, 1841. He visited it occasionally between that time and the following March, and found upon it an experienced farmer who had cultivated it six years.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Barb. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-fleet-nysupct-1848.