Cross-appeals in equity must be prosecuted like other appeals,
and although they may be taken and allowed after removal of the
cause, on appeal, to this Court, yet that cannot be done after the
lapse of two years from the date of the decree.
The Court takes notice of the facts that in this case no
assignment of errors was annexed to the transcript of the record as
required by law, and that no specification of errors was made in
the brief of counsel, as required by the rule, and expresses the
hope that there will be no recurrence of such omissions.
If a purchaser of real estate, to whom representations of the
character and value of the property are made by the vendor, visits
the property itself prior to the sale and makes a personal
examination of it touching those representations, he will be
presumed to rely on his own examination in making the purchase, and
not upon the representations of the vendor, and in the absence of
fraud or concealment, cannot have the sale set aside; applying this
rule to the present case, the bill must be dismissed.
In equity. Decrees dismissing the bill and the cross-bill. Each
party appealed. The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 135 U. S. 610
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
John Churchill held title to certain lands in Mississippi as
trustee for Mary M. Clark, whose husband, M. L. Clark, in 1881,
employed J. H. D. Bowmar, of Vicksburg, to sell the property, which
he did, to A. B. Pittman, also a resident of that city, and on the
16th of March, 1882, Churchill as trustee, and Mr. and Mrs. Clark,
all residing in Louisville, Kentucky, conveyed the lands, and "the
mules, implements, and cattle, on the plantation, save two horses,
reserved by said two parties" to Pittman. This conveyance recites
that it is "made this 9th day of January, 1882," but the
attestation clause is that the signatures are appended the 16th day
of March, 1882, "the date of the sale being of 9th January, 1882,"
and the acknowledgment by the grantors is March 16th. The
consideration of the conveyance was $5,000 in cash, and four notes
of Pittman for $5,000 each, bearing interest at eight percent, and
payable at one, two, three, and four years from date.
In the latter part of January, 1882, certain other personalty on
the premises was sold by Clark to Pittman for $1,000 cash and three
acceptances -- one for $1,000, due April 1, one for $1,000, due May
1, and one for $1, 133.10, due June 1, 1882, with grace. Two of
these acceptances were transferred by Clark to the trustee, who,
when they matured, brought a separate suit upon each of them. The
other acceptance passed into the hands of a
bona fide
holder without notice. When the first of the notes given as
consideration for the conveyance became due, suit was brought upon
it, and on the 7th of November, 1883, Pittman filed his bill in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of
Mississippi against John Churchill, trustee, and Mr. and Mrs.
Clark, alleging that fraudulent representations had been made to
him in the sale of the plantation and accompanying personal
property, and also in the matter of the personalty subsequently
purchased from Clark, and asking that the three suits above
mentioned be enjoined, for an account of damages suffered, and
their application by way of recoupment, offering to pay
Page 135 U. S. 611
whatever might be found due on a proper accounting, and for
general relief. It is admitted by counsel for appellants that the
controversy over the latter purchase has been satisfactorily
adjusted and that so much of the transaction is only incidentally
referred to in connection with the other fraud, circumvention, and
deceit alleged to have been practiced. The bill claimed failure of
title as to part of the land, but this was fully met by the answer,
was not pressed below, and may be regarded as out of the case. The
oath to the answers was not waived, and accordingly the answer of
Mary M. Clark and John Churchill, trustee, was duly verified. Clark
was not served, and filed no answer, but his deposition in one of
the lawsuits was put in evidence.
A cross-bill was subsequently filed by Churchill and Mrs. Clark,
praying that an account be had and stated between the parties; that
whatever was found to be due from Pittman on the notes for the
purchase money of the plantation should be decreed to be a lien
thereon, and the land sold to pay the same; that cross-complainants
might have judgment for the amount found due on the two notes given
for the personalty, and that a receiver be appointed, etc. It was
ordered by the court that the cross-bill be treated and held as for
a receiver only, and the complainant's bill as the answer thereto,
as well upon the motion for a receiver as at the hearing, and that
the cause be referred to an examiner and commissioner to take proof
upon the issues set out in the bill, and
"of the damages claimed by the complainant, and state an account
between the parties, recouping against the purchase money due the
defendant the damages suffered and sustained by the complainant, if
any, because of the alleged frauds and misrepresentations set out
in the bill, should they be established to his satisfaction."
Proofs were accordingly taken, and a report made by the special
commissioner, and a final decree rendered November 5, 1885, in
favor of Churchill, trustee, for the recovery from the complainant
of the sum of $19,129.50, to bear interest at the rate of eight
percent per annum from the second day of September, 1885, until
paid, and that said sum of money, with interest and costs, should
be a first and prior lien
Page 135 U. S. 612
on the lands in question, which should be sold, in satisfaction,
in default of payment as provided. From this decree and appeal was
prayed by the complainant, an appeal bond duly given and approved
December 1, 1885, with Thomas Rigby as surety, and the record was
filed in this Court November 13, 1886. The opinion of the district
judge holding the circuit court was filed September 2, 1885, and
appears in the record.
On October 31, 1887, the defendants Churchill and Clark
presented a petition for a cross-appeal to a Justice of this Court,
and obtained an allowance thereof, an appeal bond being approved,
and a citation issued on that day. This petition was filed in the
circuit court on the 7th day of November, 1887. The citation bears
this endorsement:
"On this 5th day of November, in the year of our Lord one
thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven, I, as administrator of the
estate of Alfred B. Pittman, accept service of the within citation,
and hereby enter my appearance as such administrator herein. WALTON
FARRAR, Adm'r."
This citation accompanied the transcript of the petition, order,
and bond on cross-appeal filed in this Court November 21, 1887. It
appeared from the petition that since the original appeal was
taken, Alfred B. Pittman had died, and the cause had been revived
in the name of Walton Farrar as administrator.
No decree in any action in equity can be reviewed by this Court
on appeal unless the appeal is taken within two years after the
entry of such decree. Rev.Stat. § 1008. And appeals are
subject to the same rules, regulations, and restrictions as are or
may be prescribed in law in cases of writs of error. Rev.Stat.
§ 1012. As it is the filing of the writ of error in the court
which rendered the judgment that removes the record, the writ of
error is not brought, in the legal meaning of the term, until it is
so filed.
Brooks v.
Norris, 11 How. 204. Nor is an appeal "taken" until
it is in some way presented to the court which made the decree
appealed from.
Credit Company v. Ark. Central Railway
Company, 128 U. S. 258.
Cross-appeals must be prosecuted like other appeals, and
therefore the cross-appeal is not taken until brought to the
Page 135 U. S. 613
attention of the court whose decree it questions. Although the
record may have been removed to this Court upon appeal, yet the
court below may allow a cross-appeal, sign a citation, and approve
a bond within the two years prescribed. And so, when a cross-appeal
appeal is allowed by a Justice of this Court, the petition and
order of allowance must be filed in the court below in order to the
due taking of the cross-appeal under the statute. As in this case
the petition, order, and bond were not filed in the circuit court
until after two years had elapsed from the date of the entry of the
decree, the cross-appeal must be dismissed.
The amount due to Churchill, trustee, upon the notes and
acceptances, does not appear to have been questioned, and, with
interest from January 9, 1882, to the second day of September,
1885, reached the sum of $28,541.70. The court passed upon
exceptions embracing the items of damages claimed by way of
recoupment set forth in the commissioner's report, and allowed the
sum of $7,454, which, with interest to September 2, 1885, made an
aggregate of $9,412.20, and that amount, being deducted from the
$28,541.70, left a balance of $19,129.50 in favor of the defendant
Churchill, trustee, for which the decree was rendered. The
dismissal of the cross-appeal dispenses with any inquiry into these
allowances so far as the cross-complainants are concerned.
By section 997 of the Revised Statutes, an assignment of errors
is required to be annexed to and returned with a writ of error, and
the rules, regulations, and restrictions are, as remarked before,
the same as to appeals as in cases of writs of error. By the
twenty-first rule of this Court, it is, among other things,
provided that the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error or
appellant shall contain
"a specification of the errors relied upon, which, in cases
brought up by writ of error, shall set out separately and
particularly each error asserted and intended to be urged, and in
cases brought up by appeal the specification shall state as
particularly as may be in what the decree is alleged to be
erroneous. . . . When the error alleged is to a ruling upon the
report of a master, the specification shall state the exception to
the report, and the action of
Page 135 U. S. 614
the court upon it. . . . When there is no assignment of errors
as required by section 997 of the Revised Statutes, counsel will
not be heard except at the request of the court, and errors not
specified according to this rule will be disregarded; but the court
at its option may notice a plain error not assigned or specified.
When, according to this rule, a plaintiff in error or an appellant
is in default, the case may be dismissed on motion."
There is no assignment of errors annexed to the transcript of
the record in this case, nor does the brief of counsel contain any
specification of errors such as is required by our rule. We shall
not in this instance decline to consider what we suppose to be the
errors relied on, but we call attention to this disregard of the
statute and the rule in the hope that nothing more is needed to
prevent its recurrence hereafter.
Appellants insist that the circuit court erred in not allowing
complainants for the difference in value of 800 acres of the land
in question, alleged by them to have been warranted to be above
overflow, but to be subject to it, for rebuilding fences and
cleaning ditches, and replacing foundations to houses, in
consequence of overflow, and for loss occasioned by deficiency in
cleared land. The charge is of fraudulent representations by the
defendants or their agent as to the freedom of the lands from
liability to overflow from the Mississippi River, and also as to
the number of acres of cleared land in the tract conveyed.
It was held in
Andrus v. St. Louis Smelting & Refining
Company, 130 U. S. 643,
130 U. S. 648,
that
"false and fraudulent representations upon the sale of real
property may undoubtedly be ground for an action for damages, when
the representations relate to some matter collateral to the title
of the property, and the right of possession which follows its
acquisition, such as the location, quantity, quality, and condition
of the land, the privileges connected with it, or the rents and
profits derived therefrom."
In
Myers v. Estell, 47 Miss. 4, 21, the Supreme Court
of Mississippi said:
"In an action for the price of land sold, the purchaser may set
up in defense the fact that the vendor
Page 135 U. S. 615
defrauded him by false representations as to the quantity,
quality, condition, and boundaries of the land. An offer to rescind
the contract is not necessary in order to entitle the purchaser to
maintain an action for damages for the fraud, . . . nor to entitle
him to defend to the extent that he has suffered by the fraud; that
is, to the extent that he would be entitled to recover in an action
for damages founded on the fraud. The question may as well be tried
in an action for the price, and the rights of the parties be
settled in one suit, as to allow the plaintiff to recover the whole
stipulated price, and then permit the other party to recover back
the whole or a part in an action for the fraud. It is the policy of
the law to avoid a multiplicity of suits."
In
Estell v. Myers, 54 Miss. 174, and 56 Miss. 800, the
vendor having filed his bill for the foreclosure of his mortgage
for the purchase money, the defense of false representations was
set up, and it was held that the vendee might recoup in damages (1)
the difference in the value of the land, either party being at
liberty to show that the actual value was more or less than the
land would have been worth if it had answered the representations,
the contract price to be taken as the value of the thing as
represented, unless a higher or lower value was clearly
established; (2) for the deficit or loss of crop by reason of
overflow; (3) for the drowning of cattle and animals, and (4) for
the expense of replacing fences, etc.
The general principles applicable to cases of fraudulent
representation are well settled. Fraud is never presumed, and where
it is alleged, the facts sustaining it must be clearly made out.
The representation must be in regard to a material fact, must be
false, and must be acted upon by the other party in ignorance of
its falsity, and with a reasonable belief that it was true. It must
be the very ground on which the transaction took place, although it
is not necessary that it should have been the sole cause if it were
proximate, immediate, and material. If the purchaser investigates
for himself, and nothing is done to prevent his investigation from
being as full as he chooses, he cannot say that he relied on the
vendor's representations.
Southern Development
Company,
Page 135 U. S. 616
v. Silva, 125 U. S. 247. "If
the party to whom the representations were made," remarked Lord
Langdale in
Clapham v. Shillito, 7 Beavan 149,
"himself resorted to the proper means of verification before he
entered into the contract, it may appear that he relied upon the
result of his own investigation and inquiry, and not upon the
representations made to him by the other party; or, if the means of
investigation and verification be at hand, and the attention of the
party receiving the representations be drawn to them, the
circumstances of the case may be such as to make it incumbent on a
court of justice to impute to him a knowledge of the result which
upon due inquiry he ought to have obtained, and thus the notion of
reliance on the representations made to him may be excluded."
In
Hall v. Thompson, 1 Smedes & Marsh. 443, it was
held that where T. sold a tract of land to H., and represented that
it contained only 50 or 60 untillable acres, whereas about 300
acres were unfit for cultivation, but prior to the sale H. examined
all the land more than once, H. was not entitled to rescind the
contract on the ground of misrepresentation,
sed aliter if
fraud had been employed to conceal the defects. And the court
ruled, Sharkey, C.J., delivering the opinion, that
misrepresentation entitling to relief must be in reference to some
material thing unknown to the purchaser, either from not having
examined, or from want of opportunity to be informed or from entire
confidence reposed in the vendor; that a concealment of material
facts known to the vendor, and unknown to the vendee, which are
calculated to influence the action, or operate to the prejudice of
the vendee, is fraudulent, but that where the facts lie equally
open to both vendor and vendee, with equal opportunities of
examination, and the vendee undertakes to examine for himself,
without relying on the statements of the vendor, it is no evidence
of fraud in such case that the vendor knows facts not known to the
vendee, and conceals them from him.
Cleaveland v.
Richardson, 132 U. S. 318,
132 U. S.
329.
At the same time, silence may be, under some circumstances,
equivalent to false representations.
Stewart
v. Ranche
Page 135 U. S. 617
Company, 128 U. S. 383,
128 U. S. 388,
where it is stated:
"In an action of deceit, it is true that silence as to a
material fact is not necessarily, as matter of law, equivalent to a
false representation. But mere silence is quite different from
concealment.
Aliud est tacre, aliud celare. A suppression
of the truth may amount to a suggestion of falsehood, and if, with
intent to deceive, either party to a contract of sale conceals or
suppresses a material fact which he is in good faith bound to
disclose, this is evidence of and equivalent to a false
representation, because the concealment or suppression is in effect
a representation that what is disclosed is the whole truth."
Applying these rules to the case in hand, we find no adequate
ground for disturbing the decree.
Mr. and Mrs. Clark and the trustee, Churchill, resided in
Louisville, in the State of Kentucky. The land was situated in the
State of Mississippi, of which the complainant was a citizen,
residing at Vicksburg. The bill states that the defendants' agent
was
"one J. H. D. Bowmar, a real state agent in Vicksburg, said
district, of undoubted integrity and of the most excellent standing
and reputation, who was well known to your orator, and possessed
his fullest confidence, as indeed he does that of the whole
community,"
and that Bowmar delivered to complainant a written memorandum in
respect to the plantation he proposed to sell, as follows:
"First-class plantation in Bolivar County, on Miss. River; 1,550
acres in tract, 1060 acres under cultivation; dwelling, with 6
room, halls, and galleries, and suitable outbuildings; stables for
70 mules; 2-story barn, with cribs to hold 7,000 bushels of corn;
clover and millet lots; new fencing; place well ditched and
drained; 14 cabins, 4 rooms each; 11 cabins, 2 rooms each, all new;
a fine garden attached to the dwelling; 26 acres of the above
cleared land detached, but only half a mile away; 4 cabins; 40
mules; full supply of farming implements; price, $25,000. Have
written for terms."
"J.H.D.B."
"Owner of the property says 800 acres above overflow; the levee
engineer says 500, and all high lands opposite Arkansas City, on
Miss. River. "
Page 135 U. S. 618
Complainant testifies that he purchased the property on the
faith of this statement, and informed Bowmar that he relied "on all
of these representations therein contained as material
inducements." He says he visited the plantation in the latter part
of December, after he
"had closed the purchase. I was there about the 30th or 31st of
December, 1881, but was not able to judge to what extent the
particulars in Dr. Bowmar's mem. were accurate, except, of course,
as to the buildings and fences."
In his bill, Mr. Pittman puts the acceptance of the proposition
as after his return from visiting the plantation, and this is
confirmed by the evidence of Taylor, Clark's manager, that when
Pittman came there he "stated that he wanted to buy the place, and
thought that he would, in case he bought the place, need all the
supplies." The letter of acceptance is as follows:
"Vicksburg, Miss., Dec. 29, 1881"
"Dr. Jas. H. D. Bowmar."
"Dear Sir: I accept your offer made in behalf of the owners of
the Timberlake plantation, based on the representations made as to
the amount, character &c., of the lands and personal
property."
"A. B. PITTMAN"
Mr. Bowmar testifies that he was employed by Mr. Clark to sell
the place, and for that purpose delivered the memorandum to
complainant,
"which memorandum was based on information received from Mr.
Clark and Captain Anderson, the engineer of levees for the district
in which and land is located. I knew nothing personally of the
property, as I at the time of delivering the memorandum, informed
the complainant. My recollection is that we agreed that he should
make a personal examination of the property before purchasing, so
as to satisfy himself as to the correctness or incorrectness of the
statements contained in said memorandum. I was especially
solicitous on this point, as I myself knew nothing of the place,
and did not wish the complainant to be misled by any
representations coming from me."
This is not specifically denied by Pittman.
Taylor states that in the last of December, 1881, Pittman
Page 135 U. S. 619
and Gayle,
"both strangers to me, came to the plantation, and introduced
themselves to me, and said they wanted to look at the plantation
with a view to buying it. I had horses saddled, and took them all
over the plantation, from one end to the other, all around it and
through it, and brought them back to the house."
We can find nothing in the evidence of Gayle to the contrary.
After complainant's acceptance, he gave bond for the cash payment,
and received an order from Dr. Bowmar for the possession, which was
dated January 23, 1882, and is set out in the bill. The deed was
executed on the 16th of March, 1882, and conveys by description
827.55 acres of cleared land, and 1,007.69 acres of woodland.
Gayle, Pittman's manager, says that there was an overflow in
1882, by which they were delayed until the latter part of March
before they could begin to plow, and it made them very late. Dr.
Bowmar testifies that he saw the front of the plantation under
water in 1844, when it was owned by Martin, of Louisville; that he
had been told that it overflowed in 1862, and that he heard it was
overflowed in 1882; that the overflow of 1882 was more general and
disastrous in its effect than any previous one within his knowledge
or information, and he had lived in the valley of the Mississippi
for about fifty years, his occupation prior to the war being that
of a planter; that lands previously recognized as being above
overflow were generally inundated by the overflow of 1882, and that
the words "above overflow" are usually understood to mean above any
overflow previously known to persons familiar with the valley.
There is no evidence in the record to show that Clark knew that
the place had ever overflowed. The defendants Churchill and Mrs.
Clark in their answer state that they have always understood that
the greater part of the cleared land was above the ordinary
overflows of the Mississippi River. They deny that said lands were
overflowed several times or at all before said complainant
purchased the same, and say that if the lands, or the greater part
of them, were ever overflowed,
Page 135 U. S. 620
they did not and do not now know it, and that they have been
informed and believe that even in the extraordinary overflow of
1882, a considerable part of said lands were not overflowed. They
deny making any representations to the plaintiff to induce him to
purchase the plantation, or that they made any representations at
all in regard to it. They deny that Bowmar was authorized in any
manner to make any representations to the complainant. They
specifically deny that they made any representations in regard to
the quantity of cleared land, or the number of acres exempt from
overflow or that anyone acting for them was authorized to make, or
did make, any such representations, and they deny that they
represented that there was 1,060 acres of cleared land on the
tract, but say that they believe the tract did and does contain
that number. Inasmuch as an answer under oath was not waived, the
rule that these denials must be disproved by evidence of greater
weight than that of one witness, or that of one witness with
corroborating circumstances, applies; and, taking this evidence
together, it falls far short of establishing such a case as would
entitle complainant to recover for false representations, as
claimed. The memorandum refers to 1,060 acres under cultivation,
but Mr. Bowmar's testimony -- and his undoubted integrity is
conceded by complainant -- is that he told the complainant that he
was personally unacquainted with the land, and that he was
solicitous that complainant should make a personal examination, so
as to satisfy himself as to the correctness or incorrectness of the
statements in the memorandum, and it appears that complainant went
personally upon the ground, which ought to have enabled him to
determine substantially how many acres were in fact under
cultivation.
Turning to the deed, it only purports to convey, and that by
specific description, 827.55 acres of cleared land. This deed was
given in the middle of March, 1882, and it would be entirely
unwarranted for us to hold the contents of that instrument to be
overthrown by the proof before us, particularly in view of the rule
that all preliminary negotiations or agreements were
Page 135 U. S. 621
merged in it. The contract had ceased to be executory, and while
fraud, if clearly made out, might still justify relief,
Boyce's Ex'rs v.
Grundy, 3 Pet. 210, the deed cannot be brushed away
as the result of the evidence in this record.
Upon the whole case, we see no reason for doubting the
correctness of the conclusions at which the district judge
arrived.
The cross-appeal is dismissed, and the decree is
affirmed.