Tuck v. Downing

76 Ill. 71
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 76 Ill. 71 (Tuck v. Downing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuck v. Downing, 76 Ill. 71 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal from the circuit court of Cook county, to reverse a decree entered in that court in favor of Jerome P. Downing against J. H. L. Tuck and others, cancelling a certain note executed by the complainant to the defendant Tuck, for certain mineral lands in Utah territory, sold and conveyed by the defendant to complainant. The cause was regularly set for hearing on bill, answer, replication, and proofs heard, and a decree passed as prayed. The defendant appeals.

It is unnecessary to consider the point made by appellant, questioning the right of the court to allow an amendment to the bill of complaint on the hearing, for, in our view of the whole case, appellee has no merits.

Appellee, under the second head of his brief, contends there are three elements of fraud in this transaction, or three classes of fraudulent representations; and, first, with regard to the price for which Scribner’s two-thirds interest could be bought; second, the representation made by appellant to appellee that Camp and Scott had paid, each, five thousand dollars for a share, and that Noble had paid for two shares; and, third, the false representations made by appellant as to the character, quality and condition of the mines.

On the first point, there being no fiduciary relation between the parties, such a misrepresentation, if one, is not sufficient cause to rescind a sale. Banta v. Palmer, 47 Ill. 99. If the price alleged to have been paid, in that case, was thousands of dollars instead of units, the principle would be the same— that is not controlled or affected by figures. We also refer to 1 Story’s Eq. Ju., secs. 199, 200; Merryman v. David, 31 Ill. 404.

But what are the real facts on this head ? Scribner, through whom appellant claimed, was, with one Wood, the undisputed owner of the property in question, the legal title being vested in Scribner alone. He was an experienced miner and prospecter, and had sold to Lucian P. Sanger an interest of one-third in these mines, and they, not haying the necessary capital, were desirous of finding those who had and were willing to invest, for the purpose of further developing and working the mines. Scribner was examined as a witness in this cause, and he stated, and it is not contradicted, that the first time appellant went East with Sanger, he (Sanger) had a deed, or some other writing, giving him the control of this two-thirds interest, and he had given his obligation to pay nine thousand dollars therefor, in sixty days, or return the papers. There was no agreement between the parties as to the selling price to other parties. When they went East they were not acting for witness or Wood, but for themselves. No sales were made by Sanger at Erie, and he returned the papers to Scribner, who did, about the 24th of July, 1873, execute a deed to appellant for this interest. Appellant gave his obligation for nine thousand dollars, which recited if they did not get their pay in sixty days, they (Scribner and Wood) were to hold the mines—appellant was to • reconvev to them. At any time, Scribner testifies, their interest could have been purchased for ten thousand dollars. He further testified, when Barr and Camp (the committee) were at Utah, appellant had the sole right to determine the value for which this two-thirds interest should be sold. On the return of appellant to Utah, he paid Scribner for his interest, telling him the property had been sold for fifteen thousand dollars, saying, he and Sanger still' retained an interest, but how much witness did not know—don’t think they ever told him:

Upon this point appellant testified, that Mr. Noble asked him in his bank at Erie, the second time he was there, if he did not think if he (Noble) was to go to Utah, he could buy this property of Scribner for less money than appellant ivas asking for it. Appellant replied, ‘* No, not a cent less,” and this, as appellant testified, for the reason he had the deed for the property in his possession, and showed it to Noble, and said to Noble he had given Scribner his obligation. Appellant repeated this to the other parties, and showed to all of them the deed he had from Scribner, and told them he had given Scribner his obligation, not naming forty thousand dollars he had' given, but that they could not purchase the mines for less than forty thousand dollars of Scribner, for it had ceased to be Scribner’s property.

The pretense these parties were not dealing with appellant himself, but with Scribner through him, is put at rest by this testimony and by the exhibition of Scribner’s deed to appellant for this property, sold and conveyed to him, in consideration of nine thousand dollars. All this occurred after the return of the committee from Utah, and after they had made their report, and shows conclusively they were dealing with appellant as the owner of the property, which he, in fact, was.

Appellee testified, that appellant told him the contract for the sale of the mines had virtually been transferred to him. Appellee, then, before he bought, and executed his note, knew when .he was trading with appellant he was negotiating with the real owner of this two-thirds interest, who made the representations he did make as owner of the property, eager to get the best price he could for it.

Now, when this deed to appellant, exhibited freely to appellee and all the other parties before the sale, showed on "its face that the consideration paid or agreed to be paid by appellant was only nine thousand dollars, how could it be material if he did state he was bound to pay forty thousand dollars for it? There was the deed which appellee saw and read, expressing nine thousand dollars as the whole consideration. Can it be believed these parties could have been influenced by this declaration when they were confronted by the fact that nine thousand dollars was the price appellant had paid or was bound to pay Scribner ? It is folly to urge that this statement of appellant influenced the action of appellee in any degree. It could not have been so, appellee being a man of business capacity, and the general Western agent of one of -the most extensive corporations in the Union. Justice Stoky says, if a party knows a representation to be false when made to him, it can not be said to influence his conduct ; and it is his own indiscretion, and not any fraud or surprise, of which he has any just complaint to make, under such circumstances. 1 Story’s Eq. Jur. sec. 202. Courts of equity do not aid parties who will not use their own sense and -discretion upon matters of this sort. Appellant was dealing with his own property, and had a right to “puff” it in the most extravagant terms, the other party being at full liberty to exercise his own judgment about it. There is nothing in the record to contradict appellant in these respects, and it must be taken as true. The deed spoke a language all could understand, and that informed these parties appellant had purchased the property for nine thousand dollars, and common sense should have .taught them he had the right to sell it for as much as he could get for it, he himself occupying no fiduciary relation. Banta v. Palmer, supra.

It is not fair to say, as appellee does in his brief, that he was dealing with appellant as a partner, and between partners the utmost good faith must be observed. The evidence does not show this relation. A partnership is not the theory of the bill.

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76 Ill. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuck-v-downing-ill-1875.