Wooley v. Locarnini

164 P. 319, 18 Ariz. 539, 1917 Ariz. LEXIS 108
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1917
DocketCivil No. 1519
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 P. 319 (Wooley v. Locarnini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wooley v. Locarnini, 164 P. 319, 18 Ariz. 539, 1917 Ariz. LEXIS 108 (Ark. 1917).

Opinion

CUNNINGHAM, J.

During the month of July, 1913, the appellee visited Arizona for the purpose of buying a tract of land for farming purposes. He is a farmer, and had followed that occupation for a number of years in California. He visited friends at or near Gilbert, in Maricopa county, and while so visiting he, with his friends, met the appellant. Upon inquiry, the appellant -offered to sell to the appellee 80' acres of productive farm land. The appellee was shown the land, and the parties had a number of conversations about the land and the quality of the land. The appellant fixed the price for which he offered to sell at $110 per acre. After the parties had concluded negotiations on the occasion of the appellee’s visit, without arriving at any agreement, the appellee returned to California, and later wrote from California to the appellant, accepting the offer of the land for $110 per acre. Later, about the 1st of August, 1913, the appellee returned to the land, and a contract of sale was prepared and. signed by the parties, by the terms of which the appellant agreed to sell the 80 acres of land described, for a consideration of $110 per acre or the full sum of $8,800, which should be paid to the party of the first part in the following manner: $800 had been paid; the sum of $15 per acre, or the sum of $1,200, should be paid as soon as an abstract of said prop[541]*541erty had been prepared and found to show clear title, except certain encumbrances; and the balance of said purchase price, ■to wit, $6,800, on or before the fifteenth day of September, 1913. A failure to pay any of the amounts of money provided to be paid the parties agreed would work a forfeiture of ■the contract at the option of the seller. The appellee took possession of the land as agreed, and, agreeable to the parties, he paid $8,000 of the purchase price, and on January 7, 1914, $800 of the purchase price remained due and payable. Thereupon the appellee made, executed and delivered to the appellant his promissory note, due six months after date with interest, for the said balance of said purchase price of the land, and appellant accepted said note therefor. Prior to the date of maturity of the said note, the appellee notified appellant that the land involved was not of the quality represented, and that before the appellee paid the appellant the amount of the note, and other amounts of account between the parties, an adjustment of the matter would be insisted upon. The appellant accompanied the appellee over the land, ■and appellee pointed out portions of the land he claimed were not as represented, but which were worthless. No agreement was reached by the parties concerning this dispute. When the note matured, the appellant, as plaintiff, commenced this action to reduce the note and an account to a judgment. The defendant admitted the making of the note and its nonpayment. He admitted that he owed the account, and interposed a counterclaim based upon the allegations that the plaintiff . . represented to defendant, that the said lands were fertile, and every part thereof was of such nature that the same would raise good crops; that there was no sterile, or so-called ‘slick’ soil upon said land, ‘slick land’ being such land as would not respond to irrigation, and would not raise crops under any conditions of proper care and farming; also represented that plaintiff had raised crops upon each and every portion of said lands; that defendant, by an examination of said lands, could not ascertain that said representations were false, and relied upon plaintiff’s statements, respecting the quality of said lands, and, relying thereon, then and there agreed to pay the plaintiff a total price per acre for said lands, the sum of $110 per acre; that all of said purchase price has been paid, except the amount represented by the [542]*542note described in the complaint. That the representations made by plaintiff to the effect that there was no ‘slick lands’" upon said 80-acre tract were false and fraudulent, and that plaintiff knew that they were so false and fraudulent, and knew that defendant relied upon same as being true, and were made for the purpose of inducing defendant to purchase said lands at a price greatly in excess of the real value of said lands, and defendant, relying upon said statements and representations as being true, did pay for said lands all the purchase price thereof, except the said note, . . . and was on account thereof cheated and defrauded to an amount ... of over $4,000; . . . that defendant should recover that amount from plaintiff as the difference between the real value of the land and the value thereof had said representations been true. ’ ’

The plaintiff replied or answered the counterclaim so set forth by the defendant. Therein he denies that he made the representations complained of on January 7, 1914, when the note was made, or at any time. He denies: “That said land was fertile, and every part thereof of such a nature that the same would raise good crops.”

He denies: “That there was no sterile or slick soil upon said land, or that this plaintiff had raised crops upon each and every portion of said land.”

The plaintiff further denies: . . That defendant, by an examination, could not ascertain that said representations were false, and denies that the defendant relied upon the plaintiff’s "statements, or any statements of plaintiff, regarding the quality of said land, but alleges that defendant purchased said land with full knowledge of the condition of the same after having examined said land by going upon the same and with full opportunity to judge of the conditions of said land and soil. ’ ’

This portion of the plaintiff’s reply is in effect such a character of pleading as amounts to an admission that plaintiff made the statements and representations which he is charged with having made, but that he did not make such statements with regard to the making of the note in suit. This portion of the pleading is a clear admission on the part of plaintiff that there is sterile, slick soil on the tract, and that plaintiff knew it existed thereon, and that the defendant [543]*543had ample opportunity to know that such soil was on the tract and the extent thereof, and with full knowledge in that respect the defendant nevertheless proceeded to, and did, purchase the land, after having examined the same. The issue thereby raised is: Whether defendant relied upon plaintiff’s representations, which were admittedly false, or whether he relied upon the result of his personal examination of the condition of the lands. In other words, whether the false representations of the condition of the land, made by the plaintiff, were the proximate efficient cause of defendant’s injury and damage. The reply continues further, as follows:

“Plaintiff denies that any representations made by this plaintiff to the defendant as to the quality and condition of said land were false and fraudulent, or that the plaintiff knew that any statements made by him to the defendant regarding said land were false and fraudulent, and denies that the defendant relied upon any statements made by plaintiff, or relied upon the truth of any statements made by plaintiff in regard to said land, or that any statements made by plaintiff in regard to said land, or that any statements whatsoever were made by this plaintiff with the intention of inducing the defendant to purchase said land at a price in excess of the value of said land.”

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Bluebook (online)
164 P. 319, 18 Ariz. 539, 1917 Ariz. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooley-v-locarnini-ariz-1917.