Court Opinion

ID: 7889212
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:46:45.391065+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:31:51.246805
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Johnston, J.:
On January 19, 1887, B. W. Matlack sought and obtained a conveyance of 200 acres of real estate in Cowley county from George Shaffer and his wife, Elizabeth A. Shaffer. This action was brought by the Shaffers to cancel and set aside the deed of conveyance, upon the ground that it had been obtained by misrepresentation and fraud. The Shaffers, who resided in Baltimore, and were over 70 years of age, had never seen the land, and were not acquainted with its location and value. George Shaffer had inherited the land or an interest in the same from his nephew, who died in 1873, unmarried and without issue. Matlack lived in the vicinity of the land, and was acquainted with its conditions and value. Learning that the Shaffers had an interest in the land, he wrote to a gentleman in Maryland, on December 21, 1886, stating that he had recently bought a piece of land, and, in order to make the title absolutely good, he desired to obtain a quitclaim deed from the Shaffers. He told his agent to whom he wrote that their title did not amount to much, but he would be willing to pay them $25 each, and would give the agent $100 to perform the work. The agent replied that the Shaffers lived in Baltimore, and that if he would send him $10 to pay expenses he would go to that place and look them up. The agent visited the Shaffers, and proposed to give them $50 for a conveyance of the land, telling them that Matlack had a tax title to the same. The Shaffers declined to accept the offer, and their declination was reported to Matlack, who sent another letter of advice to his agent, *211directing him to tell the Shaffers that he held a title under a tax deed which was seven years old, and if there were any technical errors in the same they had been cured by the five-year statute of limitations. He directed the agent to offer them $100, and if they would not accept that, to give them $150 or $200; and if they refused to take these sums, to state to them that he would commence an action against them to quiet title, in which event they would never get anything, and that these offers were made to save the trouble of a lawsuit, and to enable him to dispose of the land immediately. He inclosed a quitclaim deed partially filled out, advising him that he “must use a little stratagem in this, but do not miss the mark.” In accordance with this advice, the agent again visited the Shaffers, and after considerable persuasion and pressure succeeded in getting them to sign the conveyance. The consideration for the same was $200, while the land is conceded to be worth $6,000 or over, and the interest of George Shaffer therein is worth at least $1,500. At that time Mat-lack had no tax title whatever to the land, nor did he hold any tax lien on the same, neither had he any possession of the land then or at any other time. The possession and occupancy of the same were in another, who claimed title by a deed purporting to be from the sole heirs of the former owner.
The court below found that the execution of the conveyance had been procured by false and fraudulent representations, upon which the grantors relied, and but for which it would not have been executed. We think the testimony justifies the finding, and that the judgment should stand. George Shaffer, by reason of age and illness, was feeble in mind and body at the time the conveyance was obtained, and it is clear that he was deceived and overreached through the false representations made to him. He knew nothing as to the tax liens or claims upon the land, nor was he acquainted with the tax laws of Kansas. Matlack, through his agent, • represented to him that he had a tax title which was good, and if there were any defects or technical errors therein they *212had been cured by the lapse of time. He was also told that it would cost him a large sum of money to send an attorney or other person out to investigate the matter, and that an action would be begun against him; and the agent told him that from what he knew the tax title was good, and that if he did not accept the $200 he would never get anything. This agent in his testimony states that Shaffer would not have signed the deed if it had not been for these representations. More than that, he was told and led to believe that the description in the deed covered only 160 acres of the land, and, attention being called to the extent of the land, the agent confirmed that belief. Shaffer specially objected to signing the deed if it contained more than 160 acres. He then employed Matlack’s agent to look up and care for his title and interest in the remaining 40 acres, which he supposed were not included in the instrument of conveyance. It thus appears that he was led to believe that Matlack had a good title to the land, and that, by possession and the running of the statute of limitations, his own interest was of little or no value. But for these misrepresentations, he would not have executed the conveyance for any such trifling consideration. Some of the misrepresentations made by Matlack were of fact, and some of them were of fact based on law. They were untrue, and calculated to mislead the Shaffers, who did not have the knowledge or opportunity to know the truth of the representations made. While they were ignorant, Matlack had superior means of information, and by the misrepresentations obtained an undue advantage, from which the Shaffers were entitled to relief.
It is claimed that Matlack’s statement with reference to the tax deed was not wholly untrue. It appears that the land had been sold for taxes, and it was claimed that the person who had obtained a tax deed had agreed to share his title with Matlack. The testimony with respect to this is not satisfactory, and is of little value as a support for Matlack’s claim. It appeared that the tax sale upon which the tax deed was issued was only for one-fourth of the 160-acre tract, and *213for 19 acres of the 40-acre tract, and Matlack claimed that the tax title covered the whole of both tracts.
It is also said that the Shaffers had no right to rely upon Matlack’s statement that he had a tax deed, because it was a matter of public record, of which they were bound to take notice. The facts with reference to the title and Matlack’s rights to the land were not equally within the knowledge of both parties, or the means of acquiring knowledge possessed by both. The Shaffers were nonresidents, and more than a thousand miles from the land and the public records pertaining to it, while Matlack was acquainted with the land and the records, and also knew of the ignorance of the Shaffers respecting the title. In the absence of any personal knowledge, the Shaffers were, under all the circumstances, justified in relying on Matlack’s representations. They had no immediate means of learning the facts by an examination of the records, and as Matlack knew the statements to be untrue, and it appears that they have been relied and acted upon as true by the Shaffers, they are entitled to recover, although they might have discovered the fraud by searching the records. (Claggett v. Crall, 12 Kas. 393; McKee v. Eaton, 26 id. 226; Curtis v. Stilson, 38 id. 302; David v. Park, 103 Mass. 501; Safford v. Grout, 120 id. 20.)
The Shaffers Rendered a return of the $200 paid to them when the deed was executed, and, upon the whole record, we think the district court made no mistake in its conclusion that the deed should be canceled and set aside.
Its judgment will be affirmed.
All the Justices concurring.