Court Opinion

ID: 7105054
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:20:01.661159+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:32.516845
License: Public Domain

Granger, J.
The plaintiffs in the ease are Julius O. Her, H. E. Gates, O. J. Schmidt and Mary A. Fried. The defendants are H. W.- Griswold, O. P. *443McKesson, N. P. Stoddart and Charles Hunt. Prior to the commencement of the suit, the parties, both plaintiff and defendant, agreed among themselves upon a joint purchase of forty acres of land, near Council Bluffs, Iowa. A conference led to the selection of H. W. Griswold as a trustee to effect a purchase, receive the title, and do other things for and on behalf of the purchasers. The conveyance of the land to Griswold as. trustee was by one Isham Wright, and the consideration therefor was four thousand dollars. Before the agreement of the purchaser to make the purchase the defendant McKesson had alone conferred with Wright, and secured his terms, and, as claimed by the appellants, secured an option on the land for a certain time. The price paid for the land by what, in argument, is called a “ syndicate” was eight thousand dollars; and the relief sought in the action is based upon the claim that Griswold and McKessqn represented to the syndicate that the purchase price from Wright was eight thousand dollars, whereas, in fact, it was but four thousand dollars; and that Griswold and McKesson wrongfully profited to the extent of the four thousand dollars paid in excess of the áctual purchase price.
That the price paid for the land by Griswold, as trustee, was four thousand dollars, is not questioned.; nor is it disputed that eight thousand dollars was paid by the syndicate, and that McKesson received one-half of it. The claim of the appellants is “that the syndicate purchased McKesson’s option in the land, for which he was entitled to the difference between the purchase price to Wright and the price fixed upon his option, eight thousand dollars.” The district court found the transaction fraudulent as against the plaintiffs, Gates and Schmidt, and gave to each a judgment against Griswold and McKesson for five hundred dollars, and certain costs; and the appeal is by Griswold and McKesson alone, from such judgment.
*4441. Purchase of lands: fraud: damages: equitable relief. I. The testimony fully justifies the finding of the district court that the plaintiffs, Gates and Schmidt, are entitled to relief of some kind. What the relief siiouLa be we will notice hereafter. Without reviewing the testimony showing the facts, it is a plain case of imposition and fraud. Gates and Schmidt believed, and had reason to believe, that they were entitled and became parties to a transaction in which all the members were to share equally, and that the trustee of their choice was to act for all alike, and not where one or more of the members of the syndicate were, under cover of a secret option right, to profit at the expense of the other members, and this is exactly what was done. It is true they paid no more than they understood they were to pay, and it is urged that because of that there was no fraud or damage for which damages are obtainable at law or in equity. , But can we sustain such a .claim? Conceding, as we find the fact to be, that Gates and Schmidt agreed to become joint purchasers of the land under representations that Wright’s price for the land was eight thousand dollars, when in truth it was but four thousand dollars, and that members of the syndicate, whom they believed were to share equally with them, have taken the money paid by them under the belief that it was necessary to secure the land, and is there not both fraud and damage? Nothing more can consistently be claimed than that they were to pay their proportion of what would buy the land from Wright, and whatever they paid in excess of that was taken from them by false representations, and in the transaction they were certainly damaged to that •extent. It is urged that this property was every day increasing in value, and complaint is made of the action of the district court because there was no proof to show that the land was of less value than was paid for it, and authorities are cited in support of a rule *445that fraud without damage “is no ground for remediable jurisdiction, legal or equitable.” But this is-not a case of that character. As we have held, Gates and Schmidt were purchasers from Wright, and not from McKesson, ' and, no matter how great the actual value of the land, they were entitled to all the advance over the actual price to Wright, and, in so far as the fraud of the defendants deprived them of such advance, they were damaged. In consequence of the fraud they each paid, or obligated themselves to pay, just twice as much for the land as they should have-paid, which was five hundred dollars each, and the-district court so found.
2. practice: equity cause: award of damages. II. The specific relief asked in the petition was. to have the title to the land quieted in the plaintiffs. This the district court, in effect, denied, and ordered a money judgment, and the-right so to dó is questioned, and reference-is made to Richmond v. Dubuque & S. C. Ry. Co., 33 Iowa, 489. The case only holds, that, where a party is-entitled to no equitable relief, relief as in a law action cannot be given. But in this cáse the plaintiffs were certainly entitled to equitable relief, but, because of' the peculiar situation of the case as to parties and the-property, it could be more definitely measured or determined by way of damages than by some equitable apportionment or division of the land, and the action of the court in this respect is legal.. Code, section 2855, provides: “The relief granted to the plaintiff, if there be no answer, cannot exceed that which he shall have demanded in his petition. But in any other case the court may grant him any relief consistent with the case made by the petition, and embraced within the.issue.” To our minds the judgment of the district court reflects justice, whicíi should be the guiding star of judicial inquiry, and it is affirmed.