Smith v. Smidt
Smith v. Smidt
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
The petition among other things states that in January, 1868, the defendant in error was the owner of a tract of land in Brown county, in this State, and exchanged the same with the plaintiff in error for a tract of land in Lee county, Illinois. The trade was made and the deeds exchanged in Brown county; the defendant in error had never seen the land in Illinois, but relied entirely upon the representations of plaintiff in error, who represented the land in Illinois as good tillable farm lands fit for immediate cultivation and worth $1,5Q0; whereas, the land was not good tillable farm land but was a swamp and entirely valueless, which fact was well known to the plaintiff' iii error and wholly unknown to the defendant in error.
The petition asked a rescission of the contract on the ground of fraud and demanded judgment of $400 as damages.
The bill of exceptions does not disclose the evidence or the instructions of the court, and the only question presented is, whether the court below erred in ruling out certain testimony offered by the plaintiff in error. -It appears, that when the plaintiff below had closed his case, the defendant offered to prove by his own testimony that he had told the plaintiff, at the time the trade was being negotiated, that the land in Illinois was flat, bottom land, and would need a. ditch from two to four feet deep all around it to render it fit for cultivation, and that he did not want to sell the land. This testimony was ruled out — and this ruling was plainly erroneous.
Evidence: Ad-mi&sion of. This testimony tended directly to negative one of material allegations of the petition. The petition stated that defendant had represented the land as fit for immediate cultivation. While this testimony showed or tended to show that he had represented that it would first need draining, what effect this testimony might have had in the decision of the case cannot be determined here. It is enough that it was proper evidence to introduce, as the issue was made up and the plaintiff in error was clearly entitled to the benefit of it.
The plaintiff's cause of action rested on certain alleged false and fraudulent representations made by the defendant below, and the reliance placed on these representations by the plaintiff. The answer plainly denied the making of the false and fraudulent statements and this was the only issue in the case. The plaintiff by it
Triad: Evidence It is urged by counsel for defendant in error that the plaintiff in error was not prejudiced by thé ruling. “That the evidence was heard by the jury and produced its impression as much as if not subsequently ruled out.”
This is not law. The argument is in substance this: The presumption is that the jury wholly disregarded the decision of the court in ruling out the testimony, and therefore this court must wholly disregard the erroneous decision of the court. The logic of this is not better than the law.
The case must be reversed and a new trial awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lorenzo D. Smith v. Fredrick Smidt
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- The petition alleged that the defendant had represented certain land in Illinois to he good tillable farm lands, fit for immediate cultivation and of the value of $1,500, whereas, the land was a swamp and worthless. The answer denied, making any such false and fraudulent statements: Held 1. Evidence. — That under this issue it was competent for defendant to prove any fact that tended to show that such representations as alleged had not been made, or that they were not false. 2. Evidence: Representation. — It was competent and proper to introduce testimony to prove what the defendant really did state about the land. 3. Evidence. — It was proper to introduce testimony that defendant had represented that it was flat land and would require a ditch from two to four feet deep around the laud to render it fit for cultivation.*