Samp v. Long
Samp v. Long
Opinion of the Court
This action is brought by plaintiff against defendants to recover damages for fraud and deceit in the sale of a farm, near Ipswich, S. D’. The case was tried to a jury, and resulted in a verdict of $2,500 damages on which judgment was rendered. A motion, in the alternative for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial was denied by the trial court, and this, appeal is from the judgment and said- order.
P'rior to and at the time of the sale defendant Long was a married woman living with her husband at Omaha, Neb. She had for some time been engaged in the sale of real estate, and at times had aided one Briggs, a real estate dealer of Ipswich, S. D., in his deals. Defendant P. I. Kinneberg is her father, and was then living at Omaha. Plaintiff and wife lived at Spencer, S. D., and were not acquainted with land values at Ipswich. Mrs. Long advertised the land for sale at $90 per acre in a Sioux City paper, giving her address in the advertisement as Miss M., Box 275, Omaha, Neb. She claims to have been the owner of the land sold, but the record' title was in defendant P. I. Kinneberg. After some correspondence with Mrs. Long, under the name of Miss Mathild'e Kinneberg, plaintiff and his wife arranged to meet her at Aber
There are several assignments of error in the admission and rejection of evidence, but such assignments have not ■been discussed in appellant’s brief. At the close of plaintiff’s case he asked1 leave to amend' one paragraph of his complaint setting out more specifically and fully the claimed fraud which was allowed by the court. Appellant objected to the amendment on the
Appellant’s principal contentions are that the evidence is insufficient to show a conspiracy' between the defendants to have the father pose as King in furtherance of a common plan to defraud and cheat plaintiff, that the acts complained of do not constitute actionable fraud or deceit, and that in any event if plaintiff ever had a right of action for deceit that he waived such right by electing to confirm! the contract and agreeing to a subsequent modification of its terms.
The evidence of a conspiracy or concerted action on the part of the defendant discloses that the defendants are father and daughter; that they came from Omaha together to Aberdeen; that the daughter introduced her father as King; that the daughter had assisted' Briggs, a real estate dealer of Ipswich, in deals of his wherein -her father had posed as King, (although in what manner he was used dbes not appear); that the daughter claimed to own the land; that the father was the owner of the record title! and 'had an interest' in the land to>' secure a large1 advancement made by him to his daughter; and that the daughter assumed her maiden naine instead of her married name. The record discloses sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding that there was a concerted action on 'the part of the defendants in effecting the pose assumed by the father and his conduct thereunder.
“In the one, the buyer is aware of his position; he is dealing with the owner of the property, whose aim is, tO' secure a good price, and whose interest it is to put a high estimate upon his estate, and whose great object is to induce the purchaser to make the purchase; while in the other, the man who makes the false assertions has apparently no object to gain; he stands in the situation of a disinterested person, in the light of a friend, who has no motive or intention to depart from the truth, and who thus throws the vendee off his guard, and exposes him' to be misled by the deceitful representations.”
See, also, Batchelder v. Stephenson, 150 Minn. 215, 184 N. W. 852; Adams v. Collins, 196 Mass. 422, 82 N. E. 498, 12 R. C. L. 53; Hull v. Doheney, 161 Wis. 27, 152 N. W. 417; Booker v. Pelkey, 173 Wis. 24, 180 N. W. 132; First National Bank of St. Paul v. Blocker, 150 Minn. 337, 185 N. W. 292.
[xo] If .one poses as a disinterested party and gives a false statement as to value with intent to> mislead the purchaser and to prevent his. making further inquiry, or with the hope that he will be influenced and accept it and not make further inquiry, if it is
The contention that plaintiff has waived his right to recover because he did not rescind and because he procured a modification of the contract after discovery of the fraud is not supported by the record Any claimed fraud as to the character and quality of the land was eliminated by the court on the ground that plaintiff was bound to discover the character and quality of the land upon examining it and had no1 right to rely upon representations in reference thereto, but, as to the fraud complained of 'and which the court submitted to the jury, namely, the false pose of P. I. Kinneberg, there is no evidence as to when this was discovered. In April, 1921, plaintiff received a deed from' P. I. Kinneberg, and of course was then apprised of the fact that the record title was not in Mrs. Long, but this did not apprise him- of the fact that P. I. Kinneberg was the man he had met and known as P. I. King. The record is wholly silent as to- when this fact was discovered, except that plaintiff says he did not know of the fraud until long after a change in the contract had been made.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
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