Watkins v. West Wytheville Land & Improvement Co.

22 S.E. 554, 92 Va. 1, 1895 Va. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 25, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 22 S.E. 554 (Watkins v. West Wytheville Land & Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. West Wytheville Land & Improvement Co., 22 S.E. 554, 92 Va. 1, 1895 Va. LEXIS 80 (Va. 1895).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The West Wytheville Land and Improvement Company sold to Warner M. Watkins four lots, for the aggregate price of $1,000. Of this sum $250 was paid in cash. A deed was made to the purchaser, and a contemporaneous deed of trust was executed to secure $750, the balance of the purchase money. Payments were made on the balance thus secured, and the vendor instituted this action to recover of the vendee $333.33, with interest, that being the balance remaining unpaid upon the transaction.

The defendant filed three special pleas in writing, under section 3299 of the Code, alleging that the plaintiff represented at the time of the sale that certain valuable improvements would be erected on the company’s lands, near the lots bought by defendant, which would greatly increase their value; that these representations were false; that the improvements had not been made, and that the lots had consequently become of little valne, worth not more than $25 each, aggregating $100, and that he had suffered damage to the amount of $900, which he claimed as offset to the plain[8]*8tiff’s claim, and asked for judgment against the plaintiff for $566.67, the difference between the damages claimed and the balance of the purchase money sued for.

To the filing-of these pleas the plaintiff objected, and the court sustained the objection, and rejected said pleas. The court then entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant obtained a writ of error from this court.

It is insisted that these pleas were properly rejected, because the defence set up under them was a purely equitable one, and could not be made at law ; that the defendant, by his pleas, sought to rescind and set aside his contract of purchase, and to re-invest the vendor with the title to the lots.

We do not understand this to be the purpose or effect of these pleas. On the contrary, they expressly set out the value of the lots, in consequence of the false representations complained of, and only claim damage by way of offset for the difference. The purchase price of the lots was $1,000. The pleas allege that they are now worth $100, and that the damage sustained, which is filed as offset, amounts to $900. Ho rescission of the contract of sale is asked for, nor is any needed. The defendant has a deed to the lots, and, if he were to prevail with his defence, he would only have to move the court, under the statute (section 2é98), to have the deed of trust resting on the lots marked satisfied ” on the deed-book, and produce the judgment in his favor as evidence of its satisfaction.

The party claiming to have been damaged by fraud and misrepresentation in the sale or purchase of real estate may elect to ask a court of equity to rescind the contract, or proceed at law for damages. Under the rejected pleas the defendant had clearly elected to keep the lots and seek compensation for the damage sustained.

Section 3299 of the Code is as follows:

“ In any action on a contract, the defendant may file a plea alleging [9]*9any such failure in the consideration of the contract, or fraud in its procurement, or any such breach of any warranty to him of the title or the soundness of personal property, for the price or value whereof he entered into the contract, or any other matter as would entitle him either to recover damages at law from the plaintiff, or the person under whom the plaintiff claims, or to relief in equity, in whole or in part, against the obligation of the contract; or, if the contract be by deed, alleging any such matter arising under the contract, existing before its execution, or any such mistake therein, or in the execution thereof, or any such other matter as would entitle him to such relief in equity; and in either case alleging the amount to which he is entitled by reason of the matters contained in the plea. Every such plea shall be verified by affidavit.”

The language of this statute is broad and comprehensive, and was intended to avoid a multiplicity of suits, and give full opportunity for making defences at law under the special plea of set-off provided for by it. Before this statute was as broad in its terms as now, Judge Lee, in commenting upon it, in Watkins v. Hopkins, 13 Gratt. 743, 746, says: “The diminution in the value of the subject by reason of the vendor’s shortcomings should therefore in some form be made good to the vendee, and I can perceive no good reason why compensation should not be made good in this form by an equitable plea of offset under our statute. Indeed, it seems a very appropriate mode by which the diminution of the value of the thing purchased may be compensated by a corresponding diminution of the price to be paid. There is nothing in the terms of the statute to restrict the plea of equitable set-off to contracts in relation to personalty. The terms of the act are general, ‘ in any action on a contract,’ and it includes contracts by deed as well as contracts by parol, and there can be no reason for excluding all contracts relating to the sale and purchase of real property from the operation.”

In the case of Grayson v. Buchanan, 88 Va. 251, this court held pleas under section 3299 good which were filed for the purpose of recovering damages for a deficiency in the quan[10]*10tity of land, and for the loss of one-half of a spring which the vendor represented was on the land sold.

In the case of Mangus v. McClelland, decided at the present term of this court, in which special pleas filed under section 3299 were rejected, it appeared that the object of the pleas was, not only the recovery of damages for the false representation made to the defendant, but to have the contract between the parties rescinded, and to re-invest the vendor with the title to the lots which he had conveyed to the vendee; and a deed was filed with the pleas from the defendant re-conveying the several lots to the plaintiff, and waiving and relinquishing all claim upon them on the part of the defendant. The court held that the pleas were not available in such a case, because a court of law was not competent to do complete justice between the parties, and recourse must of necessity be had to equity. The only object of the pleas in the case at bar was the recovery of damages by way of set-off resulting from failure of consideration, in consequence of the false representations of the vendor.

In a case, therefore, where the equitable grounds relied on would require a rescission of the contract, and are-investment of the vendor with the interest alleged to have been sold, a plea by way of special set-off under section 3299 could not be relied on ; but where no rescission is asked for, and none is needed—the only purpose of the plea being to ascertain the damage sustained by reason of the default of the vendor—the plea can be relied on and the defence made at law under the statute. The pleas were therefore improperly rejected on the ground that the defence could not be made at law.

The second and third pleas make in somewhat different form the same defence. They allege that the inducement to the defendant to buy the lots was the representation by the plaintiff, at the time of the sale, that there would be built upon the company’s land, and near the lots sold defendant, -a [11]

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.E. 554, 92 Va. 1, 1895 Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-west-wytheville-land-improvement-co-va-1895.