Twitchell v. Bridge

42 Vt. 68
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 Vt. 68 (Twitchell v. Bridge) 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
Twitchell v. Bridge, 42 Vt. 68 (Vt. 1869).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Peck, J.

The note, secured by the mortgage which the orator seeks to foreclose, was given by the defendant to the orator for a part of the purchase price of the farm in question, conveyed by the orator to the defendant at the date of the mortgage. The defendant claims a deduction from the amount of the note on account of a fraudulent verbal warranty and false representations of the orator, as to the quantity of land in the intervale meadow which constituted the greater portion of the farm, and by which warranty and representations it is insisted the defendant was in'duced to make the purchase.

The description of the premises in the orator’s deed to the defendant is not by courses and distances, but only by abuttals ; the boundaries given being the bank of West river and the bank of the creek, and the land of O. S. Howard and the land of John Blanden ; to which description is added: “ supposed to contain one hundred and fifteen acres be the same more or less.” The deed refers generally to “ former deeds,” without-specifying what deeds. It appears that the defendant resided at a distance from the farm, and was entirely unacquainted with it until he went to purchase it in the latter part of November, 1864, about the time the trade was made between the parties. It appears that no measurement was made, and that the orator represented the farm as containing one hundred and fifteen acres, and assured the defendant that the meadow contained eighty acres. Without going into the particulars of the evidence, it is sufficient to say that we [72]*72find that the orator, in negotiating the sale to the defendant, represented the meadow as containing not less than eighty acres, and made such representations with such professed knowledge on the subject, and with such assurance, that he must have known that the defendant relied on them as true in making the contract, and we further find that the defendant under the circumstances had a right to, and did, rely on the representations as true, and made the purchase upon the faith of them.

It is insisted by the orator’s counsel that these facts, if proved, being proved by parol evidence, are inadmissible to prove a warranty that the meadow contained eighty acres. The defendant’s counsel insists that, as the deed is silent as to the quantity of land in the meadow, such warranty may be proved by parol; but if not provable as a warranty, that the evidence further shows that the orator knew at the time, or had good reason to believe, that there were not eighty acres in the meadow, and that at the time of the representations he did not believe there was that number of acres in the meadow. We have no occasion to decide whether it is competent for the defendant to prove merely a verbal warranty; for in view of the fact that the orator had owned, occupied, and resided on this farm for more than thirty years, in connection with the other evidence and circumstances in the case, with the fact which we find, that the meadow actually contained but sixty acres, but three-fourths the number of acres the orator represented, we are all agreed that the orator must have had such reason to believe that the meadow did not contain eighty acres that he was not justified in representing to the defendant, and assuring him as* he did, that it contained that number of acres. It is a significant fact that although the orator in his testimony testified that he bought the meadow for eighty acres, and that it was always called eighty acres, he nowhere in his testimony states that he supposed or believed when he sold it to the defendant that it contained eighty acres. The affirmation of what one does not know or believe to be true, intentionally made to induce another to enter into a contract, if it turns out to be false, is in law as unjustifiable as the affirmation of what he knows to be false. It is clear then that [73]*73the orator is bound in some form to make good his representations as to the quantity of land in the meadow.

But it is insisted that, in an action at law upon this note, the 'defendant could not interpose this defense to reduce the recovery ■upon the note, and that the same objection to such defense applies here. If no promissory note had been given, and this plaintiff had sued at law for the price of the land, there is no doubt that this defense would be admissible to reduce the recovery. So in actions at law upon promissory notes, a partial failure, or partial want of consideration, is a defense pro tanto, if it is a matter of computation, and not unliquidated damages to be assessed by the jury. Therefore if by the contract in this case the price of the meadow land had been at a certain sum per acre, this defense would be admissible pro tanto in an action at law upon the note ; since on showing the deficit of the land, the sum to be deducted would be matter of computation. But as the whole farm was purchased at the gross sum of $4000, the sum to be deducted would not probably be matter of computation, as the meadow land and the hill land may not be of equal value by the acre. It has been held in this state that in actions at law upon promissory notes in case of partial failure, or partial want of consideration, if the amount is unliquidated, and not susceptible of being ascertained by computation, the defense can not be admitted. It is difficult to see any sound reason for this distinction. In Kelly v. P ember, 35 Vt., 183, it was held that such defense was admissible where the damage sustained by the maker of the note was equal to the amount of the note in suit, although another note also had been given for the other portion of the price of the land, and had been paid. The legislature, by the act of 1867, has abolished this distinction and let in such defenses, thus placing this subject on clear and sensible ground. As the decretal order in this case is entitled, September term", 1867, it is to be inferred that this case was heard in the court of chancery before that act was passed, and that act therefore can not control our decision on this appeal. The act however applies as well to notes executed before its passage as after. Nor is the aid of that statute needed to let in this defense pro tanto. It is in accordance with the policy and practice in [74]*74chancery, that where the court has jurisdiction of the parties and. subject matter for one purpose, it will proceed and settle all the rights of the parties relating to the subject matter as far as practicable. The technical objection to adjusting this whole matter in this suit, is of no avail in a court of equity. It is in no sense an offset; it is a defense growing out of the same contract on which the note and the mortgage were given, and strikes at the consideration of the note. The proof shows a partial want of consideration. The orator is asking the court in a proceeding instituted by himself, to enforce the note for the whole nominal amount, and thus to compel the defendant to pay more than he justly or equitably owes, or else to be barred of his equity of redemption. A party who asks equity must do equity. It is not in accordance with equity law to compel this defendant to páy for land he never had ; to pay more than the orator is entitled to hold; and to compel the defendant to resort to a court of law to recover back the excess. The whole matter should be adjusted in this suit, and the defendant decreed to pay only so much as the orator is equitably entitled to receive and ultimately retain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Vt. 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twitchell-v-bridge-vt-1869.