Mercer v. Parker

Oregon Supreme Court
Mercer v. Parker, 262 P. 948 (Or. 1928)
124 Or. 89; 1928 Ore. LEXIS 34
Coshow

Mercer v. Parker

Opinion of the Court

COSHOW, J.

“It is a rule of practice in this state that a motion for nonsuit must specify the grounds therefor, and unless it does so an appellate court will not review the action of the trial court in denying the motion. (Cases cited.)” Robertson v. State Ind. Acc. Com., 114 Or. 394, 404, 405 (235 Pac. 684). Waiving that, the result is the same.

It is alleged in plaintiff’s complaint that plaintiff is a widow and informed defendants, who at all times mentioned in the complaint were the agents of plaintiff and to whom plaintiff paid a commission, that she had no knowledge of the value of real property within the City of Portland and that she was relying upon their representations as to the value of said premises. The sole charge of fraud on the part of the plaintiff is that the value of the property was misrepresented to her.

As a rule, an expression of the value of property is one of opinion rather than a statement of fact. There are circumstances, however, where the representations of the value of property are statements of fact, and if false an action for damages may be predicated thereon: Kerr, Fraud and Mistake, Amer. ed., 1877, 53 et seq., § II; Boord v. Kaylor, 114 Or. 62, 66, 67 (234 Pac. 263); Corbin Co. v. Preston, 109 Or. 230, 249 (212 Pac. 541, 218 Pac. 917); Carty v. McMenamin, 108 Or. 489, 497, 498 (216 Pac. 228); Greig v. Inter *92 state Inv. Co., 121 Or. 15, 19, 20 (253 Pac. 877), and authorities there cited.

The instant case does not present one of a buyer dealing with a seller at arm’s-length. The complaint discloses that plaintiff desired to purchase the property and employed defendant Parker to find a property for her. Her testimony tends to support her complaint, so the parties were not dealing with each other as purchaser and seller, but rather as principal and agent. The testimony is very emphatic that plaintiff relied absolutely upon the judgment of defendant Parker. It is true that plaintiff was permitted to view the property and did examine it casually. It is also true that she informed the defendant Parker that she was relying- upon his judgment; that she was making a purchase of property for the purpose of reselling the same, and that she was unfamiliar with value of property in the locality where the property involved was situated. In Larsen v. Lootens, 102 Or. 579, 593 (193 Pac. 699, 203 Pac. 621), this court quotes with approval from 12 ft. C. L. 361, the following sentence:

“Nor does the fact that one makes an examination or makes inquiries necessarily show that he did not rely on the false representations of the other party.”

The evidence also discloses that defendant Parker represented the property to be worth $5,000. His representations appear to be statements of fact rather than expressions of opinion. He was an experienced real estate dealer in Portland and assumed to know the market values of property in the vicinity of the tract involved. The evidence also discloses, by his own admissions, that he warned the party who held a mortgage against it not to inform the plaintiff the *93 price the mortgagee had received for the property in a comparatively recent sale thereof to defendant Parker or to one of his customers. Parker’s testimony in that regard is as follows:

“I called her up and told her not to quote any price on that property as I say she had already killed several deals for us, hut if she must quote a price to please quote the price we were asking, which was $5,000.”

He had already admitted in his testimony that he had asked her not to say anything about the price he was asking and that he informed said mortgagee that he was inflating the price thereof. The evidence shows he had paid $3,700 for the property, $200 of which was his commission.

Under the peculiar circumstances of this case we think that the representations made by the defendant Parker to plaintiff were statements of fact and said statements, being false, as we are bound to conclude after the verdict of the jury, constituted sufficient grounds for damages. The principle relied upon by defendants is not applicable to the instant case. Defendants cited the following cases: Fairbanks v. Johnson, 117 Or. 362 (243 Pac. 1114); Crouch v. Butler, 119 Or. 344 (248 Pac. 849); Gesme v. Potter, 118 Or. 621 (247 Pac. 765); Linebaugh v. Portland Mortgage Co., 116 Or. 1 (239 Pac. 196).

It is not the province of this court to weigh the testimony to determine which of the parties has made the better case. A question of fact having been presented to the jury and the jury having returned its verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the court is bound by that verdict, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.

Aeeirmed. Behearing Denied.

Reference

Full Case Name
BESSIE F. MERCER v. ARTHUR C. PARKER Et Al.
Cited By
6 cases
Status
Published