Court Opinion

ID: 3822180
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:56:38.674206+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:47:12.375865
License: Public Domain

Parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court, inverse to their order here. Mabel Nichols, plaintiff, had judgment against E. M. Brown for $2,160 for fraud. She alleged that defendant had induced her to purchase promissory notes for said amount by the statement, first, that said notes were worth 100 cents on the dollar; that said notes were secured by chattel mortgage on hotel furniture, the defendant being the owner of the first mortgage *Page 234 
on the same property; that after plaintiff procured said notes, defendant denied they were worth their face value, but stated that he would buy them for $1,000; that at that time plaintiff did not care to sell said notes, but later needed money and offered to sell said notes, at which time defendant stated that his first mortgage notes were overdue and that he proposed to foreclose and that the property was not sufficient to pay his first mortgage and that therefore plaintiff's notes were worthless; that defendant told plaintiff to exchange her notes for anything whatever of value she could get and refused at that time to purchase same; that immediately defendant procured his agent to trade defendant's worthless, out-of-date, second-hand automobile to plaintiff for said notes; that thereafter defendant traded a diamond finger ring of the value of only $75 to plaintiff for said automobile; that plaintiff was inexperienced in business and relied upon defendant as her business adviser. Plaintiff, in her petition, offered to return to defendant the said diamond ring, praying for judgment for $2,310, following this allegation:
"Plaintiff further states that by reason of the fraudulent representations herein made by the said defendant for the purpose of deceiving her, that she believing the same to be true at the time they were made by defendant, acted upon the same, and was misled and defrauded out of the notes of the reasonable value, principal and interest, in the sum of $2,310, to her damage in the sum of $2,310."
From the foregoing, it is apparent that plaintiff's action was one of law for damages, bottomed on fraud. On request of defendant, the court instructed the jury as follows:
"In this connection you are instructed that if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff was entitled to rescind the transaction between her and the defendant, then before the plaintiff can recover in this action you must further find from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff with reasonable diligence, upon discovering the facts which entitled her to rescind, if you find that she was so entitled to rescind, and her right to rescind, offered to rescind said contract with the defendant and offered to restore to the defendant everything she had received under said contract and transaction, upon condition that the defendant should do likewise, and unless you so find your verdict must be for the defendant."
Defendant Brown urges for reversal that there was no evidence that plaintiff tendered the ring to defendant before bringing this action. He is right — there is no such evidence. In J. Grouch  Son v. Huber et al., 87 Okla. 83, 209 P. 764, the remedies for one thus defrauded are laid down:
"A person induced by fraud to purchase property has four remedies. He may, first, upon discovery of the fraud, rescind the contract absolutely and sue in an action at law, and recover the consideration parted with upon the fraudulent contract, and in such case he must restore, or offer to restore, to the parties sued whatever he has received by virtue of the contract; or, second, he may bring an action in equity to rescind the contract, and in such case it is sufficient for him to restore, or make offer in his petition to restore, everything of value which he has received under the contract; or, third, he may affirm the contract, retain that which he has received, and bring an action at law, to recover the damages sustained by reason of his reliance upon the fraudulent representations; or, fourth, he may, in an action against him to recover the purchase price, set up the damages sustained by reason of the fraud, as a defense or by way of counterclaim."
Said instruction evidently was calculated to bring the case within the said first remedy. However, the giving of said instruction, there being no evidence whatever of such previous tender, can avail nothing to the defendant, because he specifically requested the giving of said instruction in its identical form. He invited the condition of the record under which he now demands a reversal herein. It is the duty of this court to construe the pleadings liberally in order to effectuate justice. Section 294, C. O. S. 1921. We think said petition in its effect is sufficient to support relief under the third remedy of said Crouch Case, stating a cause at law for damages bottomed on fraud.
The court also instructed the jury:
"You are instructed that if you find for the plaintiff by a preponderance of the evidence, under the instructions of the court heretofore given you, the measure of her damages is the amount which will compensate her for all the detriment proximately caused by the fraud of the defendant.
"If you find for the plaintiff, you should return a verdict for the value of the notes sued on at the time of the transaction complained of, less any credits which she might have received from the defendant on other notes or then existing indebtedness, if you find she did receive any such, and less the value of the diamond ring as shown by the testimony, which the plaintiff will retain by reason of the refusal of defendant to accept the tender thereof made by plaintiff."
In addition thereto, the court instructed *Page 235 
quite fully on fraud and the rules in general to govern the jury in such cases. We think the foregoing instruction brought the case within the third remedy of the Crouch Case, supra, no tender of the ring being necessary on the part of the plaintiff, and, as stated, the petition of plaintiff is consonant with such theory. The parties seem to have submitted the cause on such theory, except the defendant made its record so as aforesaid, under the first remedy of the Crouch Case. The cause was actually so submitted under said third remedy. The jury evidently returned its verdict on this theory, since it made a liberal allowance to the defendant for the value of the ring, which was produced in open court and tendered to defendant in the pleadings, deducting such value of the ring from the amount claimed by plaintiff as the value of said notes. All parties knew at the time of the trial and the evidence developed that defendant collected all of said notes, and defendant was not in position to tender back said notes, had he been so disposed. In short, the jury seems to have allowed defendant for the ring, and plaintiff for her notes, under the evidence, thus adopting the third remedy of the Crouch Case, consonant with the petition of plaintiff, and said last instruction of the court. The record shows that defendant attempted to except to each and all the instructions given by the court, even to the first instruction referred to in this opinion, requested by himself. This attempt was made by an omnibus exception shown in the record following the instructions, made seriatim to each instruction given, but it is not signed by the judge, or otherwise preserved as required by section 542, C. O. S. 1921. These attempted exceptions are not exceptions at all, and cannot be considered by this court. Security Ben. Association v. Lloyd, 97 Okla. 39, 222 P. 544; Hornstein v. Yarrington, 110 Okla. 175, 237 P. 73.
It thus appears that this cause was submitted to the jury on the theory of the third remedy of the Crouch Case, supra — the affirmation by the plaintiff of the contract and retention of the ring — same being an action at law to recover the damages sustained by reason of the reliance of plaintiff upon the fraudulent representations of defendant. We have examined this record, and find that same discloses a case of rank fraud perpetrated by defendant upon plaintiff. The verdict of the jury is clearly correct, and there being no prejudicial error, let the judgment be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.