White v. Lowden

8 Misc. 106, 28 N.Y.S. 619, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 509
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 Misc. 106 (White v. Lowden) 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
White v. Lowden, 8 Misc. 106, 28 N.Y.S. 619, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 509 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Ward, J.

The plaintiff resided in Buffalo, H. Y., and the defendants interested in the contract all resided at or near Altoona, in the state of Pennsylvania, a distance of about 375 miles by the usual traveled route from Buffalo.

On the 16th of April, 1892, the plaintiff was the owner, subject to a $10,000 mortgage, of twenty-three acres and about a half of land situate between the northern corporate limits of the city of Buffalo and the southern corporate limits of the village of Tonawanda, in the county of Erie, H. Y., said limits being from three to four miles apart and the lands situate about midway between them, being on lot 39, fronting east on Delaware avenue and extending west across Elmwood avenue to the military road.

The plaintiff intrusted one William B. Johnson, a real estate broker in Buffalo, who had been in the business there a year or two, and who was familiar with the property and the lands surrounding it, to sell or syndicate the property, and for which service Mr. Johnson was to receive $100 per acre.

About the sixteenth of April aforesaid a contract was prepared in Buffalo for the sale of the lands at $2,300 an acre, payable in monthly payments covering a period of fourteen months, after a payment of about $3,000 down, and at the end of which payments a bond and mortgage was to be given for the balance on the property of $10,000. The contract was all complete, except the names and signatures of the purchasers, having been signed and sealed by the plaintiff and delivered to the said Johnson. Johnson proceeded to Altoona, where he had some friends, obtained an introduction to the defendants, and had personal interviews with seven of them, [108]*108and an interview with a cousin of the eighth, who represented Mrs. Dysart, a lady defendant. Hone of these defendants had any knowledge of the property in question or its surroundings, and were, therefore, obliged to rely entirely upon Johnson’s statements as to the quality, amount, value and condition of the land and of the surrounding territory, and of the prospects as to the advance of land in the future. Johnson represented to all of these parties that he was authorized, as the agent of the plaintiff, to sell the premises, and pointed out to them^substantially its location upon a map or paper which he had, and told them that nearly all of the land in the vicinity, and surrounding the premises, had been taken or bought up, and was held for higher prices than $2,300 per acre; that the premises were worth that amount per acre, and that it was low at that price. There were some variations in his statements to the several defendants, but not to any great extent, which appear in the findings of fact herein. In addition to these statements he ^ave most encouraging accounts of the future prospects of the territory between Buffalo and Tonawanda, and expressed the opinion that the defendants would be able to realize, within a short time, a handsome profit on their investment by resyndicating it or Otherwise. The statements of Johnson as to the value of the property, and the value of surrounding property that was held for higher prices than $2,300 per acre, made such impressions upon the defendants that they entered into the contract, relying upon the truthfulness of the same. How much importance they attached to Johnson’s statements as to future prospects does not clearly appear, but that they did rely upon the other statements, and without such statements would not have entered into the contract, was manifest from the evidence. Johnson returned to Buffalo with his contract signed, and the defendants, without making further investigations of importance as to the property or as to the truth of the representations made to them, made six monthly payments upon the contract, commencing with April 16,1892, and ending September 16, 1892, paying in all $17,660.40.

[109]*109After the September payment they began to discover that fraud had been perpetrated upon them through the representations of Johnson; they refused to make further payments, repudiated the contract for fraud, and in February following this action was commenced, setting up the contract, the amount paid thereon, the amount still due thereon and demanding performance on the part of the defendants, or, in case of their failure to perform, that the contract be foreclosed and the defendants deprived of all right and equity in the contract.

The defendants answered, alleging that they were induced to enter into the contract by means of these representations, which were false and fraudulent, and asked that the contract be rescinded and canceled for such fraud, and they recover as damages the amounts paid by them upon the contract, with interest. The defendants had never had possession of the property or received any benefits therefrom. These issues were tried by the court at Special Term, and upon the trial the defendants, by an instrument in writing, offered to surrender and reassign to the plaintiff all right or claim they might have under the contract to the land, and tendered the said instrument to the plaintiff, which he refused to accept.

It is strenuously contended by the learned counsel for the plaintiff that the statements of Johnson as to the value of the land were mere expressions of opinion, and, as such, cannot be considered in any sense as representations of fact. While it is true that mere statements as to the value of property in negotiations for sale, standing alone and disconnected from other statements, and not made with a fraudulent intent, and where the subject of the representations is equally open to all parties for examination, and where the party making the representations has not special or superior knowledge to the other, and is in no sense speaking as an expert, such statements do not form a ground of action; but where the parties do not stand upon equal ground, and the situation is such that the purchaser has not the same opportunity of forming an opinion as the seller, or there are circumstances which place the seller in a position to know the condition, qualities or [110]*110values of the property over and above those enjoyed by the purchaser, and the purchaser must to a greater or less extent depend upon the judgment or opinion of the seller in reaching his own conclusions as to whether he will make the purchase, and the seller’s statements do not appear upon their face unreasonable, and the purchaser has not fair and present opportunity to see for himself, and the seller knows that the purchaser relies or has reason to believe that he relies upon his statements, and the statements are made that he may rely upon them, then the statements as to the value may become statements of fact and may be so found by the court or jury; and if such statements are false and made with the intent to defraud, and do defraud the purchaser, they vitiate the transaction into which they enter and subject the seller to damages.

In Simar v. Canaday, 53 N. Y. 298, the court, speaking through Folg-bb, J., at page 306, uses this language: “The defendant contends that the representations alleged to have •been made by the defendant were not such as to afford a ground for an action. It is first insisted that the statements as to the value of the land and of the mortgages thereon were mere matter of opinion and belief, and that no action can be maintained upon them if false. If they were such, no liability is created by the utterance of them, but all statements as to value of property sold are not such. They may be under certain circumstances affirmations of fact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Misc. 106, 28 N.Y.S. 619, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-lowden-nysupct-1894.