Court Opinion

ID: 7963081
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:48:06.098128+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:33.696498
License: Public Domain

Cornell, J.
The issues of fact having been found in favor of the plaintiff by the verdict of the jury, the substantial averments of the complaint must be taken as true, unless there is such a want of evidence upon some material issue as would justify an appellate court in interfering with the verdict on that ground. A careful examination of the testimony satisfies us that the verdict cannot be disturbed on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to support it, without invading the province of the jury, and reversing its judgment in regard to the weight of evidence and the credibility of witnesses.
It is objected by the defendant that the alleged representa*210tions do not constitute a ground of action for deceit, and in support of this proposition several cases are cited, holding that an action of this nature cannot be maintained upon false affirmations of the value of an article, even though known to be untrue.
The false representations in this case are, “that the judgment was good and collectible; that the judgment debtor would pay it, and was solvent and responsible ; that he had just paid one thousand dollars thereon ; and that there was no prior judgment against him.” Here the existence of at least two material facts — the solvency of the judgment debtor and the non-existence of any prior judgment — is positively affirmed. These are representations, not of the value of the judgment, or how much it was worth, but of facts wholly distinct therefrom, the truth or falsity of which, however, necessarily affected such value. They were well calculated to induce a belief on the part of the purchaser that the judgment was good and collectible, and worth its full face. Representations of this character, if false, and known to be so, made with intent to deceive, and relied upon by another to his loss and injury, are clearly actionable. Pasley v. Freeman, 3 Term Rep. 51; Upton v. Vail, 6 John. 181; Hubbard v. Briggs, 31 N. Y. 518; Martin v. Roberts, 5 Cush. 126. And this is so even though the injured party may have been influenced in part by the statements of other persons, provided the jury are satisfied from the evidence that, but for such representations, he would not have acted. Kerr on Fraud & Mist. 74, 75; Hubbard v. Briggs, 31 N. Y. 518, 532.
It is claimed by defendant that the judgment itself was notice of the debtor’s embarrassed condition, that the written assignment without recourse, defendant’s refusal to guarantee its collection, his reference of plaintiff to others of whom to make enquiries, and his omission to make them, all concur in precluding a right of recovery in this case. It is admitted that the judgment debtor resided hi another *211state, where the judgment was recovered and docketed, and it is in evidence on the part of plaintiff that the defendant, at the time of the opening of negotiations for the purchase, ■said to plaintiff : “That if he (defendant) purchased the stock, he wanted to do so at once, as his son was out of business, and must know immediately ; ” that he gave as a reason why the judgment had not been collected, “ that E. P. Wilson was a personal friend of his, and that he did not want to force the collection,” though “ he was one of the wealthiest men in that part of the country, and the judgment could be collected at any time; ” that “ he would not guarantee it, because it was perfectly good without it.” The natural effect of such statements, whether so intended or not, would be to repress enquiry, and to lull suspicion if any was excited by the circumstances of the judgment being unpaid, and the refusal of the owner to guarantee it. Under such circumstances the party making the false representations cannot complain if the person whose conduct they were intended to influence relied upon them as true, instead of pursuing the enquiries suggested by defendant, which might have resulted in proving their falsity. Kerr on Fraud & Mist. 79, 80, 81.
The testimony of the sheriff of the county wherein E. F. Wilson resided, that he knew the condition of his affairs in reference to property liable to execution, that he had frequently had executions against him, and that he had no property out of which any portion of them could be made, and that his general reputation in such community was that of an insolvent, was not objectionable. Nininger v. Knox, 8 Minn. 140, 148.
The charge of the court, as given, very fully and fairly stated the rules of law applicable to the case as disclosed by the evidence, and the issues of fact which the jury were called upon to determine, and no exception to any part thereof was taken by the defendant. Several requests, however, were asked, refused, and excepted to, which we will now consider.
*212In respect to the first and third requests, sufficient has already been stated to show that they were properly refused. The false representations charged in this case were not expressions or affirmations of opinion as to the value of the judgment, or how much it was worth, but related to facts affecting such value. The representation that it ivas good and collectible implied just what the other averments indicated — that the judgment debtor ivas solvent, and had sufficient means out of -which it could be realized on execution. Hence the second request was inapplicable to the case. The fourth request was also irrelevant, as the validity of the judgment was not controverted, and the request ignored the false representations charged.
The defendant also requested an instruction, that “to justify the jury in finding that the defe dant made the false representations charged, that fact should be proved beyond a reasonable doubt,” which was refused, and properly excepted to.
The question here presented is, whether a charge of fraud in a civil action, like the charge of a crime in an indictment, must be proved by satisfactory evidence, excluding all reasonable doubts. It will not be pretended that an indictment founded upon our statute, which makes the obtaining of goods, etc., from any person, “designedly, and by any false pretence, and with intent to defraud,” a felony, and that should contain only such averments as are found in the complaint in this action, could be upheld as charging the commission of any criminal offence. No false pretence is alleged to have been falsely pretended by the defendant, feloniously, or designedly, and'with any intent to defraud., as would be requisite in the case of an indictment. 2 Whart. Am. Cr. Law, § 2,144 ; Whart. Prec. 528, and notes. Obviously the commission of no crime by defendant is specifically set forth in the complaint in this action. All that can be claimed, and all that is claimed, as we understand the counsel for the defendant, is that the cause of action, if sustained, implies an offence against the statute, and, therefore, *213the rule should apply which requires the exclusion of all reasonable doubts by the jury in their decision as to the facts, the same as in a criminal case. In other words, the •court must first determine whether the facts stated in the pleadings, or adduced by the evidence, are sufficient upon which a criminal charge might be predicated, and, if so, then to apply the criminal rule to the trial of the case, even though the issue actually raised by the pleadings in no way involves the determination of the fact of a criminal offence having been committed. This we deem unsound in principle, and supported by no authority to which we have been referred, or of which we are advised. As is well said by Walton, J., in Knowles v. Scribner, 57 Me. 495, “ it is as unreasonable to require a civil suit to be determined by the rules of evidence applicable to a criminal prosecution, as it would be to require a tailor to measure A when he is going to make a suit of clothes for B. The measure of proof must be determined by the character of the issue being tried, and not by the character of an issue which is not being tried.”
Where the issue raised by the pleadings does not distinctly call for the determination of the question, whether a crime or an indictable offence has been committed by some one, the rule asked for has no application. No such issue is raised in this case. Strader v. Mullane, 17 Ohio St. 624; Sinclair v. Jackson, 47 Me. 102 ; Knowles v. Scribner, 57 Me. 495 ; Schmidt v. N. Y. Union Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 1 Gray, 529 ; Gordon v. Parmelee, 15 Gray, 413 ; Hitchcock v. Munger, 15 N. H. 97 ; Munson v. Atwood, 30 Conn. 102. Whether the rule in question is applicable to the trial of any civil action, it is not necessary in this case to enquire or determine.
Order affirmed.