Wiest v. Garman

3 Del. Ch. 422
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Del. Ch. 422 (Wiest v. Garman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiest v. Garman, 3 Del. Ch. 422 (Del. Ct. App. 1870).

Opinion

The Chancellor :—

It is a rule well settled, that after the parties to a contract for the sale of lands have gone so far as to execute the contract by the conveyance of title, the transfer of possession and the payment or securing of the purchase money, this Court will not unravel the transaction merely to relieve against the hardship, or, even great injustice, of an unequal bargain. A contract executed, will be set aside only where either, 1st, there has been a mistake materially affecting the subject-matter of it, and with respect to which the contract cannot be reformed ; or, 2d, where the contract has been procured by fraud in some of its forms of misrepresentation, circumvention, or undue influence.

The present case goes upon the ground of fraud. It is alleged that "this was an exorbitant bargain, procured through fraudulent misrepresentations and arts, practiced by Garman and the other defendants in concert, upon a weak and credulous purchaser mentally incapable of protecting himself. Such is, in substance, the case made by the bill. This charge of fraud was, in the argument for complainant, sought to be maintained upon two general grounds. Each of them has received a distinct and careful consideration. The first of these grounds is the alleged gross and fraudulent misrepresentations by Garman, as to the value of the improvements made upon the farm, and the income- received from it for the year 1867. The allegation on this point is, that pending the negotiation, in June 1868, and while the farm was under examination by the complainant, Garman, as an inducment to the purchase, represented, 1st, that he had put upon the farm, improvements “to the amount and value of $5000;” and 2d, that “he had made $4000 off it the year before. ” The bill then denies that Garman had made improvements to more than one-half the amount of $ijooo. It also denies that he had made off the farm $4000, or even $3000.

[431]*431The first step in the investigation of this charge should be to ascertain, precisely, what were the representations which, according to the record, Garman must be taken to have made. Let it be here observed that no person, other than the parties to this bill, viz: the complainant, Garman, McConaughey and Riggs, were present during the negotiation, in the course of which, the statements by Garman, as to improvements and income, are alleged to have been made ; nor is there proved any admission on the part of either of the defendants, as to what transpired during that interview. The whole transaction rests in the bosom of these parties, and we have, in the cause, no disclosure touching any representations made by Garman, except the allegations of the complainant in his bill, and Garman’s counter-statement in his answer. McConaughey and Riggs, in their answers, are silent on this point. Garman’s answer, not being made to interrogatories filed with the bill, is not, under the recently adopted rules of Court, evidence in his favor; yet it may be used by the complainant against him as an admission in the cause, so far as it may go to support the complainant’s allegation ; and it is only by using Gar-man’s answer on this point, as an admission, that the complainant can draw from the record any proof whatever as to the representations made by Garman during the negotiation. It is hardly necessary to add, that Garman’s statement, if used as an admission and is uncontradicted by evidence, must be accepted as it is made.

This result obliges the Court to one of two alternatives, that is, either to dismiss from consideration, as wholly unproved, the alleged false representations touching the improvements and income of the farm, or to consider this allegation of the bill upon the assumption that the representations made were such as Garman’s answer states them to have been. This leads directly to what is the only admissible inquiry under this branch of the case, viz; [432]*432how far the evidence, as to the value of the improvements and the amount of income, supports the representations which Garman admits that he made on these points. And first, as to the improvements. Garman admits his having stated to the complainant that improvements had been made “ to the value of between $4000 and $5000.” To what extent, then, were improvements made in 1867 ? The testimony at large shows that fruit trees were set out, new fences set, and the old repaired, lime extensively spread, and other fertilizers used; that there was ditching and underdraining, a new carriage house and stable built, the dwelling house repaired and the grounds improved. The fact that these improvements were made is not disputed. It is their amount and value that is in controversy, and about which we proceed to inquire. Let us premise the inquiry by a very material and obvious consideration, It is, that for the purposes of this cause, the amount and value of these improvements need not be so exactly ascertained, as would be necessary in an action to recover their cost; but rather, the question is, whether Garman’s representations were so wide of the truth as not to be accounted for by the usual disposition to over-estimate the value of one’s own property, especially the value of improvements attempted upon any considerable scale, a disposition stimulated, it may be, to some exaggeration by the effort to drive a good bargain ; in other rvords, whether there were over-statements so gross as to be attributable only to a fraudulent design to cheat and over-reach. I am not able, upon the proof, to reach this conclusion. After collating the testimony of all the witnesses as to the several items of improvement, and calculating their cost, it does appear that their total cost could not have fallen much, if any, short of $4000. If this be so, then a statement by the vendor, made in driving a bargain, to the effect that' he had improved to an amount of from $4000 to $5000, though somewhat exaggerated, cannot be treated as willfully false and fraudulent, such as to lay a ground for rescinding the sale.

[433]*433We next take up the other alleged fraudulent misrepresentation, the one touching the income for 1867. Garman admits.that, pending the negotiation, he did say to the complainant that “ during the preceding year (1867) he had produced from the farm crops, which, in the aggregate, had amounted to $4000.” The difference, on this point between the bill and answer, is, doubtless, as to the sense in which the word “made ” was used ; whether the statement that Garman had “ made” $4000 off the farm,” applied to the gross value of the produce, or to the net income of the business of the year. -The latter construction, which is that given by the bill, is unsupported by any evidence. The only evidence adduced, Aaron Wiest’s testimony, falls short of it. He says, “ I heard Randall B. Garman tell my father, George Wiest, that he made $4000, off the farm in 1867.” Four thousand dollars was the net value of the crops. I heard him' tell my father so.” The date of this conversation here becomes material. It is fixed by the cross-examination. “ He told my father, ” says the witness, “ the farm was very good and that he (Randall B. Garman) made $4000 from it in one year, viz : 1867, clear of all expenses.” “ This conversation,” the witness proceeds to say, “occurred in 1868, in the month of August, in the afternoon.” This, in the words of the witness, is the whole testimony as to what Garman said at any time on this subject. I am unable to accept it as proof of this allegation of the bill: First, because it does not go to the time of the negotiation, which was in June. The witness speaks of a conversation held in August, after the purchase had been made.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Del. Ch. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiest-v-garman-delch-1870.