Court Opinion

ID: 3491143
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 21:59:35.027996+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:05:06.151919
License: Public Domain

The defendants have brought error to review a judgment of $9,517 in an action for fraud and deceit growing out of a contract for the purchase of a farm. The plaintiff owned a house on Gunston avenue in the city of Detroit, Michigan. The defendants owned a farm consisting of 140 acres in St. Clair county. An agreement was reached through the agency of one Albert Erndwein, with whom Mr. Steiner had listed the farm, by the terms of which the plaintiff bought the farm for a consideration of $24,000, which included the stock and tools, valued at $3,000. The defendants accepted a deed of the Gunston avenue property as a down payment of $8,000. The balance of the purchase price, amounting to $16,000, was to be paid in deferred payments over a period of years. The plaintiff and her husband went into possession of the farm in April, 1927, and operated it until March, 1928, when they concluded they had been defrauded, and began this suit to recover damages. The declaration charged various fraudulent representations relative to the value of the farm, its condition and productivity, but, by the time the case reached the jury, the principal issue on the question of fraud was the representation of the agent that the farm was the best in Michigan, that none of the farms in the locality of the Steiner farm could be purchased for less than $200 an acre, that some had been sold for that price, that the Mitchell farm of 40 acres had sold for $8,000, and that the Ward farm of 100 acres had sold for $20,000.
The agent's statement as to the value of the farm may be treated as a mere expression of opinion but *Page 472 
his representation that certain designated farms in that locality had been sold for $200 an acre was a representation of existing facts, and, if untrue, is actionable. Sutton v.Benjamin, 231 Mich. 153.
The plaintiff claims that she was wholly without experience in farming, that she had no knowledge of farm values, that she believed the representations made to her, relied on them in purchasing the farm, and was deceived thereby. The defendants contend that she did not rely on them, that, after the representations had been made, she undertook an independent investigation in company with Mr. Field, who was an experienced farmer, familiar with land values. To what extent, if any, she relied on the representations, was a question for the jury, and the trial court correctly so held.
Of the errors assigned, the one of greatest merit relates to the refusal of the court to give the following request to charge:
"In determining what the defendants, or either of them, represented the farm was worth, you will therefore take into consideration the kind of a deal that was contemplated, viz., a partial exchange of lands, payments by the plaintiff on a deferred installment basis, immediate possession and use of the properties exchanged to be transferred to the parties purchasing the same, and to what extent, if any, the prices each party fixed on their respective properties were inflated above a strictly cash basis for the purpose of this transaction. From a consideration of all of the facts you may find what the defendants or either of them represented the true cash market value of the farm to have been on the date mentioned."
There is evidence that the plaintiff inflated the value of her house and that the defendants did the *Page 473 
same with their farm, and that the plaintiff knew the value placed on the farm by defendants was a trading value.
Mr. Steiner testified:
"I never gave her any price. It all depended whether it was cash or whether it was contract or what it was I had to start on.
"She told me that she wanted to pay by contract, she didn't have no money except that house and she wanted to pay the difference by contract, and I told her I had not thought of selling by contract, but by contract this house — or this farm — would cost more than a money sale. * * * And I told her if I would look at the house I might think the house is priced too high; and before that she wanted me to price the farm and I told her I would not price the farm because when I saw the house I might think it priced too high. She never asked me for a price after that. The price that I was going to put on the farm might be controlled to a certain extent by what I found at the house. I would price the farm in proportion to the house."
This testimony entitled the defendants to an instruction as to the distinction in this case between contract price and the represented value. The contract price, exclusive of stock and tools, was $21,000. The plaintiff claimed that this price was the value of the farm as represented. The defendants claimed that it was an inflated price for trading purposes and was so understood by all parties. If the fact that it was an inflated value was known to the plaintiff, she was not deceived thereby, and it could not be used as a basis for damages. But to the plaintiff it would be a representation of actual value if she had no knowledge that it had been inflated. Hull v. Hostettler,224 Mich. 365. *Page 474 
Undoubtedly the fact that the contract price was considerably in excess of the actual value greatly influenced the jury in arriving at their verdict. They seem to have adopted the contract price as the value represented. The verdict of $9,517 so indicates. The court instructed them that they could consider the high price in making up their verdict, but that it was not of itself evidence of fraud. In that connection he should have instructed them in regard to the defendants' claim of inflated values, which was an important element in their defense. It was called to the attention of the court in various requests, but was not given and was not covered in the general charge. Failure to instruct the jury on this question was harmful to the defendants and constitutes error for which the judgment must be reversed.
Another question requires discussion. Error is assigned on the refusal of the court to direct a verdict in favor of Mrs. Steiner. In refusing to do so the court erred.
The two defendants were husband and wife. They held title to the farm by the entireties. It was not her separate property. Neither her husband nor the agent was authorized to act for her in selling the farm. She made no representations. But she signed the contract. The question is whether, in the circumstances, she is liable for the fraud of her husband or agent. The trial court held her liable on the theory of ratification.
Under the contractual disabilities to which a married woman was subject at common law, she could not act through an agent; she was not liable for the torts of her husband and could not bind herself by ratification. Modern statutes have removed her common-law disability to the extent that she now can contract in regard to her separate estate. She can *Page 475 
act through her husband or agent in relation thereto. She is responsible for their torts while acting for her, and can bind herself by ratification of their unauthorized acts. In other words, a married woman is now liable for the torts of her husband or agent only when he is acting in respect to her separate property. 1 Mechem Agency (2d Ed.), §§ 148 and 372; 13 R. C. L. p. 1226; 12 A.L.R. 1455, note.
In the instant case, the wife had no separate interest in the farm. She was not liable for the torts of her husband or of the agent. She could not authorize them to act for her, and therefore no liability attaches unless it can be said that she ratified the fraud.
It is not claimed, and in view of the evidence cannot be claimed, that Mrs. Steiner had any knowledge of the misrepresentations made by the agent. Without such knowledge there could be no ratification. The following excerpt fromBrown v. Wright, 58 Ark. 20 (22 S.W. 1022, 21 L.R.A. 467), correctly states the law here applicable:
"A preponderance of the evidence does not, in our judgment, show that when she received the purchase money for the hotel she knew that a false representation had been made to effect its sale, and without such knowledge her acceptance of the money was not a ratification of the fraud. 1 Mechem Agency, (1st Ed.), §§ 113, 148; Lyon v. Tams, 11 Ark. 189, 205."
In Rowley v. Shepardson, 83 Vt. 167 (74 A. 1002, 138 Am. St. Rep. 1078), the action was to recover damages for fraud in the sale of a farm, the title to which was in the wife. The court said:
"It fairly appears from the record that the farm in question was not the wife's separate property, *Page 476 
and therefore her responsibility is to be measured not by the statute enlarging the powers of married women (P. S. 3037), but by the common law. There was evidence tending to show that Mrs. Shepardson had given her husband full authority to transact this business in her behalf; and beyond this assuming the evidence to be as strong as the plaintiff's claim, that she with knowledge of the misrepresentations made by her husband in negotiating the sale accepted and appropriated the whole or a part of the consideration money and thereby ratified the sale as made, yet she is not liable at common law for the tort, it being based on her contract and not a tort simpliciter."
Other questions do not require discussion. The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial as to defendant Aaron Steiner, and the entry of a judgment of no cause in favor of Louise Steiner. The defendants will have costs.
WIEST, C.J., and BUTZEL, J., concurred with McDONALD, J. POTTER, J., concurred in the result.