Van Dusen v. Bigelow

67 L.R.A. 288, 100 N.W. 723, 13 N.D. 277, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 45
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 L.R.A. 288 (Van Dusen v. Bigelow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Dusen v. Bigelow, 67 L.R.A. 288, 100 N.W. 723, 13 N.D. 277, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 45 (N.D. 1904).

Opinion

Morgan, J.

This equitable action is brought for a reconveyance of certain real estate which was conveyed to the defendant by the plaintiff while defendant is alleged to have been plaintiff’s agent for the sale of such real estate and failed to communicate to plaintiff that he had received an offer for said land for a much larger sum than that for which the plaintiff sold the same to the defendant. The substance of the allegations of the complaint is that defendant took advantage of the confidence reposed in him by plaintiff as her agent and purchased the land himself, under fraudulent concealment of facts, for a sum much less than that which he could have sold it for, and much less than the actual value of the land. In [279]*279the complaint plaintiff offers to return all money and the security received by her from the defendant under such conveyance. The defendant by answer denies that he was plaintiff’s agent for the sale of such land, and denies that he was offered a larger sum for such land than he paid for it, and denies that he fraudulently concealed any facts from plaintiff, and denies that the land was worth any more than he paid for the same. Whether defendant was plaintiff’s agent for the sale of her lands, and whether defendant had an offer for the land of $1,400 when he purchased it for himself for $900, were the issues that were contested at the trial. The trial court found against the defendant on both these issues, and ordered that a reconveyance be made upon restoration by plaintiff of all she had received under the sale. The defendant appeals from a judgment rendered on such findings, and requests a review of the entire record under section 5630, Rev. Codes, 1899.

It is urged that the judgment is not sustained by any evidence that defendant was plaintiff’s agent for the sale of the land. This contention is based on the fact that secondary evidence was received of the contents of Exhibit A, which was found missing from plaintiff’s deposition taken at Chicago, to which said exhibit should have been attached. The notary taking the deposition certifies that Exhibit A was attached, but upon being opened it was not attached nor inclosed in the envelope containing the deposition. For the purposes of this case it will be conceded that all of plaintiff’s evidence pertaining to the contents of said Exhibit A, and all secondary evidence given as to its contents, would be excluded on trials not under section 5630, Rev. Codes 1899. The evidence will not, therefore, be considered on this appeal. Without such evidence we think the record contains evidence sufficient warrant a recovery by the plaintiff. There is evidence in the record that is not disputed that, for nearly four years prior to the sale of the land to the defendant by the plaintiff, defendant had been the general agent of the plaintiff, for taking care of her property in the city of Jamestown. He had charge of renting and repairing her house in said city, and collected the rent for the same, and paid the taxes on this house and lot, as well as on the land that is the subject of this action. Plaintiff and defendant had corresponded in reference to the sale of said land and its value. Her testimony is that she relied on him as to the value of said land, and made no inquiries elsewhere as to its value. On June 19, 1901, the defendant wrote her that he considered this [280]*280land worth $é per acre, and further said, “It would be well for you to name the amount you could sell for, and a purchaser might be found.” Prior to this, and on December 21, 1899, he wrote her as follows: “As to price of house and land, would say if you were going to trade I would think about $1,600 for house and quarter section of land. If you could get cash you might take less. Harvey sold his quarter for $650, crop payment plan.” It is also shown by uncontradicted evidence that he had full charge of her city 'property, and that she left matters to his judgment, and relied on him to protect her interests as to repairs and collections of rents, and in one letter said, “It seems as though it was not best to let them get so far behind, but you, of course, being there, understand the circumstances best.” She further testified that she relied on him as her agent to fix the selling price of her land, and that she did not know the value of the land in March, 1902, when she sold it to the defendant. On March 7, 1902, defendant wrote her on other matters, and at the close of the letter asked her: “Would you accept $900 for the south half of section six; $500 cash, balance in two years at six per cent interest? Please let me know.” She answered that she would accept such an offer. She conveyed the land to him in March, 1902, and he paid her $500 cash and gave her a mortgage on the land for $4=00. This action was commenced September 10, 1902. The trial court found as a fact that defendant was plaintiff’s agent for the sale of this land on March 7, 1902, and for a' long time prior thereto.

That he was in correspondence with her about the sale and value of this land, and advised her concerning the same, is undisputed, and is shown by his own letters outside of Exhibit A. That he was her sole agent to care for her other property is also beyond dispute. That he alone looked after all her interests in Jamestown and vicinity is also beyond question. Defendant was her agent as to certain matters, and as to those matters he had her confidence, and as to those matters she relied on his judgment. Whether he was her authorized agent to sell the land — that is, whether he was such agent in respect to the sale of the land that his contract for the sale of the land would bind her — need not be determined. We think that he was her agent in respect to the land, and, as such agent, he was under obligations to advise her fully as to all facts within his knowledge bearing upon the value of the land, and upon all matters in reference to the sale thereof. Defendant had been her agent, for [281]*281several years. We think the evidence in the record, outside of Exhibit A, is sufficient to show that he was her agent to sell this land. That such agency to sell the land is not shown by explicit writing is entirely immaterial in this kind of action. It is not a case of enforcing a contract against a principal made by an agent with a third person. In a case like the one at bar the agency may be shown by parol, as there is no statutory provision that requires an agency to negotiate for a sale to be in writing. It is the confidential relation existing between them, followed by concealment of facts, that is the gist of the cause of action. He was her agent for specific purposes connected with this land and with her other property. By virtue of such agency he became acquainted with the value of the land, and knew that she knew nothing of its value, and that she was relying wholly upon him. It is the existence of such confidence, arising out of their business relations as to a specific agency, that gives rise to a duty on his part to disclose all facts known to him in reference to the value of the land if he chose to buy it himself. It is not claimed that he made false or fraudulent statements. It is claimed that he should have disclosed that he had an offer of $1,400 for the land when he bought it for $900, and that this was a fraudulent concealment. The relations existing between them, as shown by the evidence referred to, was such as demanded frank and full disclosures of all facts known to him bearing on the value of the land before he could become a purchaser of the same, although avowedly made for himself. In Norris v. Tayloe, 49 Ill. 17, 95 Am. Dec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 L.R.A. 288, 100 N.W. 723, 13 N.D. 277, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-dusen-v-bigelow-nd-1904.