Citation Numbers: 130 A. 108, 103 Conn. 237, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 125
Judges: Wheeleb, Beach, Curtis, Keeler, Maltbie
Filed Date: 7/30/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
This is the same case which will be found in the reports of this court as Dwyer v. Redmond,
Plaintiff filed a general denial of the allegations of the counterclaim and claimed to have offered evidence upon the trial disproving all of its allegations. While the finding does not specifically set forth that the *Page 240 plaintiff knew these representations to be false, the court left this question to the jury, and from the facts which it is found the defendant offered evidence to prove, the jury might have drawn the inference that the plaintiff knew that these representations were false. None of the errors in the charge as made, or in the request to charge, as to the subject of fraudulent representations, present any substantial point meriting our consideration, except in three particulars. The second error is that the counterclaim did not charge that the representations were made recklessly, and hence this issue was not before the jury. The plaintiff's sixth request presents this very claim, and it is apparent that it was considered in the trial court without objection until after the verdict had been rendered. Under these circumstances the plaintiff is in no position now to pursue the point. The tenth assignment of error does present a substantial question as to the correctness of the following part of the charge: "It is not necessary for the defendant to have proven all the things he claims in his counterclaim were false representations or false warranties. If he has proven, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that the statements made by the plaintiff to induce the defendant to purchase the truck were false and untrue in any particular, as set up in his counterclaim, and known by the plaintiff, or by the exercise of reasonable care might have been known by the plaintiff, to be false and untrue, and the defendant believed these statements and was induced thereby to make the purchase, then the defendant is entitled to recover on his counterclaim. And false representations may be made both by words and acts. Any false statement, token, or exhibition of anything which was false and known to the plaintiff to be false, and which induced the defendant *Page 241 to purchase the truck, is sufficient to make the sale invalid."
Plaintiff's criticism of this portion of the charge is that "the jury were instructed that they could find the plaintiff guilty of fraud even if his only and sole fault was in being negligent."
The charge is that defendant is entitled to recover if he has proven: (1) that the representations as made by the plaintiff were false in any material particular; (2) that they were made by plaintiff to induce defendant to purchase the truck; (3) that they were known to plaintiff to be false, or by the exercise of reasonable care might have been known by plaintiff to be false; (4) that defendant in reliance upon these representations was thereby induced to purchase the truck.
Under this charge, if the jury found that the plaintiff made these representations to induce defendant to make this purchase, that they were in fact false, that plaintiff believed them to be true, but might by the exercise of reasonable care have ascertained their falsity, and that defendant, in reliance upon these representations, purchased the truck, defendant was entitled to recover under his counterclaim. The jury were thus instructed that if the plaintiff could, by the exercise of reasonable care, have ascertained that the representations were false, the other elements being proven, that would be fraud. Fraud cannot be found upon false representations made negligently, or erroneously, but made in good faith and not recklessly.
In determining whether a conveyance was made with a view to insolvency, we held that the failure of the insolvent to inquire as to his actual financial condition might be negligence, but could not be evidence of fraud, saying: "And it is equally obvious that he could not have contemplated insolvency as impending, *Page 242
unless he actually knew or believed that his property was insufficient for the payment of his debts. Facts which by inquiry he might have ascertained, if in truth he did not know them, or believe in their existence, could have had no influence upon his purposes or his actions. And notice enough of his actual condition to put him upon inquiry, if that inquiry had not been made, could have had no influence upon his actions. Legal fictions and equitable presumptions have no effect upon the actual conduct of men. An omission to inquire may be evidence of negligence, but negligence is not fraud, either in law or in fact, and neither proves nor indicates a positive intention to commit a fraud, whatever penal consequences the law-giver in his wisdom may attach to such negligence." QuinebaugBank v. Brewster,
We state our rule in Sallies v. Johnson,
The instruction of the trial judge we have quoted was given near the close of the charge and must be presumed to have been freshest in the minds of the jury when they came to deliberate upon the case. Of all the doctrines of the law which in these days is best understood by a jury, it is that of reasonable care, for it is the doctrine they hear most frequently in the many negligence actions tried before them. When the jury heard the instruction that if they found proven that a false representation as charged was believed by the plaintiff to be true, but that the plaintiff might by the exercise of reasonable care have known it to be untrue, and that it had been relied upon by the defendant in purchasing the truck, he was entitled to recover on his counterclaim, we cannot but think that this succinct statement would have attracted the jury's *Page 246
especial attention and may have found lodgment in their understanding and memory. Earlier in the charge the trial court instructed the jury that it might even be that if the plaintiff believed the representations to be true but had no reasonable ground for so doing, he would still be chargeable with fraud. No doubt the trial court had in mind a statement in ScholfieldGear Pulley Co. v. Scholfield,
Plaintiff claims that defendant by his course of conduct has waived his right to a recovery on his counterclaim based upon fraudulent representations by plaintiff in the sale of the truck. The defendant, when he purchased the car on December 2d 1920, gave notes for its price, six of $100 each and one of $50, the first maturing December 18th, 1920, and the others at monthly intervals thereafter. He took the truck into his possession almost at once upon the purchase, and he claimed to have proved that he began immediately to have difficulties in its operation; that thereafter he made many attempts to use it with almost no success and spent considerable money in the effort to put it in condition to use; that he repeatedly spoke to the plaintiff about this and asked him to take the truck back, but the plaintiff assured him that all that was necessary were little repairs and adjustments; and that this situation continued until May, 1921, when he finally discovered the misrepresentation as to the years *Page 247 of manufacture, and learned that the truck was absolutely worthless. Meanwhile, he made three payments toward the purchase price, $100 on December 18th, 1920, and $50 on April 16th, and $50 on May 19th, 1921. One of the claims of the plaintiff was that the defendant had waived his right to damages for the fraud, and he filed rather extensive requests to charge in regard to it, particularly emphasizing the payments which had been made. The court charged that the defendant might waive his right to claim damages for the fraud and went on: "If he made a payment after finding it out, it might be strong evidence that he did intend to waive the claim for fraud, but it is not conclusive evidence. It is conceivable that a payment might be made and be quite consistent with no thought of giving up his right to sue for fraud. So that I charge you that it is a question of fact for you to determine whether at any stage of the history of this case, at the time of the payments, the defendant made the payments with the intention of foregoing his claims for fraud; it is a question of fact for you to determine. You see also there is a fact there for you to consider, whether he knew of the fraud fully at the time of any of these payments. The plaintiff says he must have known as much at that time as he did at any time about it or as he has since known about it, because he says that Mr. Wilcox told him the truck was no good. Mr. Wilcox's opinion does not necessarily charge the defendant with notice that the truck was no good. He got Wilcox's opinion, it is true; but you would have to find as a fact that this defendant actually did know, when he made the payments, that he had been defrauded, and then that in making the payments he did it voluntarily with intention or willingness to waive his claim."
The waiver in question, it is to be noted, is not one *Page 248
of a right to rescind the contract, but of a right to recover damages for the fraud at its inception, and to that situation we deem the charge apt and adequate.Pryor v. Foster,
It is true that the counterclaim alleges merely that the plaintiff knew the representations as to the condition of the truck to be false, and does not state that any of the representations were made in reckless disregard of their truth or falsity, or in a belief that they were true, which was not supported by adequate grounds, but these were legitimate conclusions to make from the facts stated. In reading to the jury certain of plaintiff's requests to charge, the trial court did not state with the degree of certainty to be desired that it was laying down principles of law which were to govern in the determination of the case; ScholfieldGear Pulley Co. v. Scholfield,
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Boulden v. Stilwell , 100 Md. 543 ( 1905 )
Daniels v. F. & W. Grand 5, 10 and 25-Cent Stores, Inc. , 99 Conn. 415 ( 1923 )
Gannon v. Sisk , 95 Conn. 639 ( 1921 )
Dwyer v. Redmond , 100 Conn. 393 ( 1924 )
Colvin v. Delaney , 101 Conn. 73 ( 1924 )
Shackett v. Bickford , 74 N.H. 57 ( 1906 )
Board of Water Commissioners v. Robbins , 82 Conn. 623 ( 1910 )
Kornblau v. McDermant , 90 Conn. 624 ( 1916 )
Roth v. Chatlos , 97 Conn. 282 ( 1922 )
Sallies v. Johnson , 85 Conn. 77 ( 1911 )
Donnelly v. Baltimore Trust & Guarantee Co. , 102 Md. 1 ( 1905 )
Sutkowski v. Tarro, No. Cv93 0704018s (Oct. 5, 1995) , 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 11460 ( 1995 )
Reynolds v. Champion International Corp., No. 426463 (Jan. ... , 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 1389 ( 2000 )
Ceferatti v. Boisvert , 137 Conn. 280 ( 1950 )
Wittstein v. Keenan , 17 Conn. Super. Ct. 163 ( 1951 )
Horner v. Flynn , 1975 Me. LEXIS 422 ( 1975 )
Laukaitis v. Klikna , 104 Conn. 355 ( 1926 )
E. & F. Construction Co. v. Town of Stamford , 114 Conn. 250 ( 1932 )
Lowe v. Kohn , 128 Conn. 45 ( 1941 )
Miller v. Appleby , 183 Conn. 51 ( 1981 )
Banquer v. Steidley, No. Cv 97-0404728 S (Nov. 8, 2000) , 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 13665 ( 2000 )