Yeates v. Pryor

6 Ark. 58
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Ark. 58 (Yeates v. Pryor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yeates v. Pryor, 6 Ark. 58 (Ark. 1850).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Uichard Pryor filed his bill against the appellants for the purpose of rescinding a contract for the purchase of certain lands, to recover the purchase money which had been paid on such contract, and to perpetually enjoin the collection of that part which remained unpaid.

Two distinct grounds of fraud are alleged: First. Fraud in respect to the quality of the land sold and also in its relative situation to other lands: Second. In respect of the title to the land sold.

There are several interesting questions presented for our consideration, which result from the peculiar circumstances in which the parties were placed. Their respective means of information, the purposes for which the contract was entered into, as well as the subsequent conduct of the parties — all these must necessarily be kept in view in order to a proper understanding and application of the rules of law which will govern this case.

It is not every misrepresentation of the vendor in regard to the property sold, which will amount to fraud, be it ever so exceptionable in point of morals. The misrepresentation, in order to affect the validity of the contract, must relate to some matter of inducement to the making of the contract, in which, from the relative position of the parties and their means of information, the one must necessarily be presumed to contract upon the faith and trust which he reposes in the representations of the other on account of his superior information and knowledge in regard to the subject of the contract: for if the means of information are alike accessible to both, so that, with ordinary prudence or vigilance, the parties might respectively rely upon their own judgment, they must be presumed to have done so : or if they have not so informed themselves, must abide the consequences of their own inattention and carelessness. Such representations, therefore, to amount to fraud, must be of a decided and reliable character, holding out inducements, to make the contract, calculated to mislead the purchaser and induce him to buy on the faith and confidence of such representations, and in the absence of the jj means of information to be derived from his own observation J and inspection, and from which he could draw conclusions to Í guide him in making the contract independent of the representations of the vendor. Hall vs. Thompson, 1 S. & M. 443. Mississippi Union Bank vs. Wilkinson, 3 S. & M. 78. Ayrs vs. Mitchell, 3 S. & M. 683.

And first, with regard to the parties and their relative means of information in regard to the matter contracted for, at the time of making the contract.

It appears, from the facts of record, that Pryor was moving his slaves and personal estate to Arkansas, and being desirous of obtaining a situation on the bank of the Mississippi river, on which to open a farm and place a portion of his slaves, had purchased two donation claims, with which he could locate 640 acres of any of the unappropriated lands in the district subject to entry: and, being a stranger in the country, upon inquiry, was informed that defendant, Yeates, of Helena, was a gentleman in whom he might place implicit confidence, and who, from an intimate and long acquaintance in the country, was well qualified to give him information relative to the most valuable locations to be made in that vicinty. Upon his arrival at Helena, he met with Yeates, and communicated to him the object of his visit, which was to purchase a small tract of land in front of the river contiguous and adjoining to which were good vacant lands above overflow, upon which to locate his claims, making the two so acquired to constitute a tract situated and suitable for a plantation : and that, unless he could find good lands back of the front on which to locate his claims, he did not wish to purchase front lands. Yeates at once responded that he himself owned front lands of the description given, in connexion with which there were back lands subject to location by such claims, which were above overflow and of good quality.

That Pryor was a stranger in the country, and had never seen the lands, is a point conceded; and, from the fact that his slaves and personal estate were on the way, and expected to arrive in a day or two, and that his avowed purpose was to place them at once upon it, it will be perceived that the circumstances were unfavorable to such examination. It is evident, therefore, that the purchase was made on the faith and trust which Pryor placed in the statement of Yeates, and that he had done all which, under the circumstances, a prudent man should be required to do. He had not only inquired into the means of information and character of Yeates, but had openly laid before him the object and purpose which induced him to purchase front lands, and without which it would not suit him to purchase.

The next inquiry, therefore, is, whether the representations so made were, in fact, true, or false and deceptive.

Whilst it is evident that neither the lands sold nor those in the rear, and on which the claims -were to have been located, were altogether such as they were represented to be by Yeates to Pryor, the extent of the misrepresentation is a matter of some doubt; in order to determine which, it becomes necessary to review a portion of the testimony. And it may be well here to remark that, in weighing the evidence, we will not be understood as attaching importance to slight misdescriptions. Yeates must be understood, when he speaks of high bottom land, free from overflow, as meaning such as is free from all except extraordinary overflow, according to the common sense meaning attached to such terms in relation to Mississippi or other bottom lands by those accustomed to speak of them, unless by the particular language used in connexion with those terms, a different meaning would be most natural. Nor is the present condition of the land as resulting from causes in the change of the current by cut-off or otherwise, to be taken into consideration, nor indeed the state of the overflow at any time or under any circumstances since the contract, only so far as may tend to show what the elevation of the land truly was when the contract was made.

The bill charges that the complainant represented to Yeates that he wished to buy a small tract of front land, above overflow, in the rear of and adjacent to which were good lands subject to location, on which he could locate two donation claims, so as to enable Mm, by uniting the front lands with those to be entered in the rear, to make a convenient tract on which to open a farm, and that, unless he could make such location back, he did not wish to purchase front lands. To which, Yeates responded that he himself owned a tract of that description, fronting on the Mississippi river, in the rear of which were fine public lands contiguous and adjoining to said front, and of good quality, and above overflow, subject to be located by such claims.

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Related

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204 S.W.2d 155 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ark. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeates-v-pryor-ark-1850.