Opinion
December Term, 1826.
From Davidson.
1. Damages cannot be recovered for the loss of a good bargain. An action will not lie for a deceit in an executory contract, respecting the sale of lands.
2. Whether an action will lie for a deceit in the false affirmation of title to lands, quare.
CASE for a deceit in the sale of land. The defendant carried the plaintiff upon the land, and showed him a bottom containing about two acres, which he represented as a part of the land; a bargain was made, and the plaintiff paid the purchase money. The defendant tendered the plaintiff a deed, which did not include the bottom, and which the latter refused.
Nash and Murphey for the defendant.
Badger for the plaintiff.
It appeared that the plaintiff knew he had no title to the bottom, and that it was the property and in the possession of another.
His Honor, Judge Daniel, charged the jury that if the defendant made a false representation of the boundaries of his land, knowing it to be false, and the plaintiff had parted with his money, relying upon such false representations, he (21) was entitled to recover in this action. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff; a rule was obtained to show cause why a new trial should not be granted which being discharged, judgment was rendered upon the verdict, from which the defendant appealed.
It is a rule readily deducible from the authorities, that the plaintiff cannot recover in an action of deceit unless he prove, not only that a fraud has been committed by the defendant, but also that it has occasioned a loss and damage to the plaintiff. He must have been deprived, by fraudulent means, of some benefit or advantage that the law gave him a right to demand.
But it is by no means a necessary consequence of the establishment of both propositions that the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this action; for a question of law still arises upon the facts, whether the deceitful means employed were, in themselves, calculated to impose upon a person exercising the ordinary prudence and circumspection which men usually bring to the management of their affairs.
Truth and good faith ought to characterize every (22) contract between men; and there can be but one opinion relative to the immorality of asserting ownership in property, with a knowledge of its falsehood, with a view to induce another to make purchase. Yet there are many violations of the moral law for which no compensation can be given in a court of justice; some injurious consequence, some actual loss to the party confiding, must be presented in a tangible form, and the misrepresentation must be of a kind the falsehood of which was not readily open to the detection of the other party.
Now, it appears to me that the conduct of the defendant was not calculated to impose on any one of common prudence. He pointed out these two acres of lowground as belonging to the tract he wished to sell; but they were, at the very time, the property and in the possession of another person. It might be supposed that this circumstance alone would be sufficient to awaken the plaintiff's suspicion, and incite him to examine, or procure to be examined, the registry books. It is a very reasonable principle that the purchaser should not be entitled to an action of deceit if he may readily inform himself as to the truth of the facts which are misrepresented. Accordingly, we find that if the seller of a house affirm that the rent was more than it really is, whereby the purchaser was induced to give more for it than it was worth, an action will lie; for the value of the rent is within the private knowledge of the landlord and the tenant, and they may collude to deceive the purchaser. But if the seller affirm that the thing sold is worth so much, or that one would have given so much for it, although the affirmation be false, yet if the buyer might inform himself as to the value, no action lies. 1 Salk., 211; 2 Ld. Ray., 1118.
And in this case, though the assertion was false, and made with a view to induce the plaintiff to buy the land, yet he might easily have informed himself as to the state of the title. It is laid down in another case that if one should (23) sell lands wherein another is in possession, or a horse whereof another is possessed, without covenant or warranty for the enjoyment, it is at the peril of him who buys, and no reason he should have an action by the law, where he did not provide for himself. 2 Cro., 196. So if a purchaser neglect to look into the title, it will be considered as his own folly, and he can have no relief. Sugden, 347.
2. No damage has resulted to the plaintiff from the fraudulent misrepresentation of the defendant. Though the plaintiff paid the purchase money in the expectation of having the two acres as a part of the tract, yet when he discovered that the spring branch formed the southern boundary, he elected not to accept the deed, as he had a right to do, and thereby became entitled to recover back the purchase money. The receipt of this with interest would place the parties in statu quo, and complete the justice of the case. If damages were awarded in this case, they would be given for a bare, naked falsehood, the detection of which, before the consummation of the bargain, prevented any ill consequence to the plaintiff, who has not been deceived in the sale, though he may have lost a bargain.
I think there ought to be a new trial.
Strictly speaking, the injury charged in this declaration is, that the parties being in contract for the sale of a tract of land, the defendant affirmed that certain lands were his, and a part of those they were contracting for, well knowing that they were not, and the plaintiff, being an unlettered man, and believing the false representations of the defendant, contracted with him for the purchase of the whole tract, and paid him therefor the sum of $300, and this action is not brought to recover back the money paid, as upon a consideration which has failed, thereby disaffirming the contract, but for a deceitful representation in making it, thereby affirming its continuance. It is therefore, in truth, an action brought for the loss of a good bargain, which I believe it is well settled cannot be sustained. Flureau v. Thornhill, Blk., 1078.
The injury really sustained is that the defendant cannot or will not perform his contract which gives an action upon the contract, not an action in deceit for an imposition. If the defendant had imposed the property, that is, had passed the estate under this deception (other things out of the way), an action might be supported; but no estate has yet passed, at least for the two acres. The only injury which the plaintiff has sustained is either the loss of a good bargain, the breach of contract to be compensated in damages or the loss of the money which he paid; if he has suffered any other, I am unable to perceive it; neither of which can be redressed in such an action as this. The case made in this declaration only resembles the first, which gives no cause of action. If the plaintiff still insists on his contract, an action is open to him; if he wishes his money back, he can recover it in an action for money had and received. As to damages, which the plaintiff has sustained by paying his money, the restoration of the same sum with interest is in law a compensation.
Judgment reversed; new trial.
Approved: Saunders v. Hatterman, 24 N.C. 32; Fields v. Rouse, 48 N.C. 72; Lytle v. Bird, ib., 222; Capehart v. Mhoon, 58 N.C. 178; Walsh v. Hall, 66 N.C. 233; Etheridge v. Vernoy, 70 N.C. 713; May v. Loomis, 140 N.C. 357.
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