Summary
In Lizana v. Motor Sales Co., 163 Miss. 266, 141 So. 295, where the seller misrepresented the condition of the truck as to the number of miles it had run and its mechanical condition, the court pointed out that the test is whether the seller made the statement as a statement of fact and it had effect upon the matter of the purchase, and the purchaser had a right to rely on it. Consequently the verdict for the defendant was reversed because of an erroneous instruction, and the cause was remanded.
Summary of this case from Evans v. MaloneOpinion
No. 29975.
April 25, 1932.
1. APPEAL AND ERROR.
Failure to specifically state what would be proved by witness, or to have witness make answer in jury's absence, precluded complaint of exclusion of witness' testimony.
2. SALES.
Setting back automobile speedometer to deceive customers as to material facts constitutes fraud.
3. SALES.
Material representations of fact by seller ignorant of their truth constitutes "fraud" in law, and seller must make his statement good.
4. EVIDENCE.
In suit to rescind automobile sale for fraud, evidence that seller customarily set back speedometers held competent.
5. APPEAL AND ERROR. Instruction regarding rescission of automobile sale for fraudulent representation held reversible error, because conveying idea that defendant must have known representation was false or made it with reckless disregard of truth.
Instruction predicating rescission of sale of automobile upon finding that at the time of making the alleged fraudulent statement defendant's agent knew that the statement was false, or made the statement without regard to its truth or falsity, was reversible error, since it was immaterial whether defendant's agent knew the representation to be false or not, if he made the statement as a statement of fact and it had an effect upon the matter of the purchase by the buyer, who had a right to rely upon it.
APPEAL from the circuit court of Harrison county. HON.W.A. WHITE, Judge.
O.J. Dedeaux, of Gulfport, for appellant.
Suit by E.V. Lizana against the Edward Motor Sales Company. Judgment for defendant, and plaintiff appeals. Reversed and remanded.
When the defendant, thought its agent, represented to the appellant that the truck had been driven only 7500 miles and to confirm his statement called his attention to the speedometer of the truck which indicated a mileage of 7500 miles, the appellant had a right to assume that the representation was correct and make his decision as to the value of the truck therefrom. It follows that since the mileage an automobile travelled is a material element in determining the value of the automobile, the appellant had a right to show that the appellee had a custom or a rule of turning back the speedometers of its used cars.
Nash Mississippi Valley Motor Co. v. Childress, 125 So. page 708, 156 Miss. 157.
It is a well established rule that other similar frauds may be shown in order to show intent with which the representations complained of were made. In all controversies involving the question of fraud, a wide range of evidence is necessarily allowed, for it is seldom that fraud can be the subject of direct, positive evidence. Usually it is a matter of inference from the circumstances and facts. Where fraud is charged the evidence of other similar frauds perpetrated by the same person at or about the same time, and when the same motive to defraud may be reasonably supposed to have existed and especially where the acts are all part of one general scheme or plan to defraud is admissible.
12 R.C.L. 453, sec. 182; Jones Commentaries on Evidence (2 Ed.), Vol. 2, 1151, secs. 618, 619; Castle v. Bullard, 23 Howard (64 U.S.), 172, 16 L.Ed. 424; Nash Mississippi Valley Motor Co. v. Childress, 156 Miss. 157.
Where goods are purchased on material representations of the seller, and not upon the purchaser's own judgment and the representations are false, and induced the purchaser to make the bargain, the contract cannot stand, regardless of whether the seller had actual fraudulent intent or not. Putting it differently, if the seller makes material representations of facts without knowing whether they are true or false, this is fraud in law, and the seller must make his statement good.
Hall v. Thompson, 1 Smedes M. 443; Oswald v. Megehee, 28 Miss. 340; Rimmer v. Dugan, 39 Miss. 483; 77 Am. Dec. 687; Lindsey v. Lindsey, 34 Miss. 432; Alexander v. Meek, 132 Miss. 298, 96 So. 101; J.A. Fay Egan v. Cohn Bros., 130 So. 290.
C.S. Brown and Evans Lindsey, all of Gulfport, for appellee.
It may be conceded that a representation as to the mileage of an automobile is material, and is such as would avoid a contract induced by such representations, provided they were false and were known to be false at the time they were made or were made without a knowledge of their truth or falsity. Nevertheless, the party in his pleadings, and the introduction of evidence thereunder, is still bound by the rule that he must plead what he would prove.
In view of the failure of the declaration to allege that it was appellee's custom to set back the speedometers on used cars, the trial Court did not err in excluding evidence upon the subject.
Whether the false representation was made with a knowledge that it was false or without knowledge that it was true is wholly immaterial. If, knowingly, he represented what was not true there can be no doubt he should be bound to make reparation. If without knowing whether his representation was true or not he took upon himself to make it to complainant, and upon the faith of it complainant acted, he is not less bound, although he may have been only mistaken and therefore perfectly innocent.
Rimer v. Dugan, 39 Miss. 477; Davis v. Heard, 44 Miss. 50.
If a false statement is made, certainly it must be made either knowingly or without regard to its truth or falsity, i.e., recklessly.
E.V. Lizana, the appellant, filed his suit in the county court of Harrison county, seeking to recover two hundred dollars paid on a truck purchased by him from the Edward Motor Sales Company. At the time of the sale, the speedometer on the truck showed that it had been run only seven thousand five hundred miles. The testimony of the appellant was to the effect that the salesman of the Edward Motor Sales Company represented that it had not been run more than said amount, and that it was in good condition. The testimony of the salesman for the Edward Motor Sales Company was to the effect that, while the speedometer showed seven thousand five hundred miles, he told Lizana that he would not guarantee the truck or the mileage, and that Lizana must look for himself and buy it on his own judgment.
The appellant offered to prove by one Odom, who had worked for the Edward Motor Sales Company as a mechanic, that it was the habit or custom of the Edward Motor Sales Company to set back the speedometers on used cars to a less distance than such cars had actually traveled.
The former owner of the truck was a witness for the appellant, and testified that the truck had been run for fifteen, twenty-five, or thirty thousand miles.
The proof showed that the truck was in a very bad condition and had to be repaired numbers of times. There was proof for the appellant that, after complaint to the Edward Motor Sales Company, said company informed appellant that the fault was not in the car, but in the driver, and that the appellant changed drivers, and the trouble still continued. Appellant finally refused to keep the truck and demanded repayment of the money.
On the trial, the court gave an instruction reading as follows: "The court instructs the jury for the defendant that unless you believe from all the evidence in the case that defendant's agent, in making a sale of the auto truck in question, falsely represented to the plaintiff that said truck had been driven only seventy-five hundred miles when it had in fact been driven more than seventy-five hundred miles, and that at the time of making said alleged statement the defendant's agent knew that said alleged statement was false, or that defendant's agent made said alleged statement without regard to its truth or falsity, and unless you further believe from all the evidence in the case that the said alleged statement was material and that it was relied upon by the plaintiff and operated as an inducement to him, the plaintiff, to purchase the auto truck in question, and that the plaintiff did purchase said auto truck in reliance upon said alleged statement, then your verdict will be for the defendant."
The giving of this instruction is assigned for error.
In offering the evidence of Odom, the appellant did not specifically state what he would prove by him. He merely asked questions which suggested that the witness would probably answer that such was the custom of the Motor Sales Company to set back speedometers. When the court sustained objections to the questions, the appellant should have stated what he expected to prove by the witness Odom, or should have had the jury retire and the witness to make answer in their absence.
It is established in decisions in this state that the setting back of speedometers for the purpose of deceiving customers as to material facts constitutes fraud. In the case of Nash Mississippi Valley Motor Co. v. Childress, 156 Miss. 157, 125 So. 708, it was held that representations by a seller of an automobile with reference to the mileage of such car constituted representations of a material fact on which the buyer had a right to rely, and that it is a matter of common knowledge that machinery of all kinds depreciates in value from wear and tear, and that the value of a secondhand automobile is largely dependent upon the number of miles it has been driven. It was further held that in an action to recover damages against the seller of an automobile by reason of fraudulent representations relative to the mileage of a car, admission of evidence that seller was in the habit of setting back speedometers was not erroneous, in that it constituted evidence of similar frauds perpetrated by the same persons at or about the same time; and that other similar frauds may be shown in order to show intent with which representations complained of as fraudulent were made.
In Fay Egan Co. v. Cohn Bros., 158 Miss. 733, 130 So. 290, the court held that where goods are purchased on material representations made by the seller, and not upon the purchaser's own judgment, and the representations are false, this is fraud, and seller must make his statements good, regardless of whether the seller had an actual fraudulent intent or not. Putting it differently, if the seller makes material representations of fact, without knowing whether they are true or false, this is fraud in law and the seller must make his statement good. The opinion cites Hall v. Thompson, 1 Smedes M. 443; Oswald v. McGehee, 28 Miss. 340; Rimer v. Dugan, 39 Miss. 483, 77 Am. Dec. 687; Lindsey v. Lindsey, 34 Miss. 432; and Alexander v. Meek, 132 Miss. 298, 96 So. 101.
This being the law, it was, of course, important for the appellant to have the testimony of the witness Odom.
We would not reverse the case for the refusal to admit this evidence if that was the only assignment of error, for the reason that the appellant did not show what the witness would answer, or what he expected to prove by such witness if he had been permitted to answer. The witness, of course, might or might not have testified that speedometers were set back, and we do not know what the witness' answers would be.
We think, however, that the court was in error in giving the instruction above set out. The instruction is misleading and confusing, in that it carries the idea that the agent in making the representations must have known his representations were false, or that he made the statement wantonly and recklessly regardless of his obligation to speak the truth.
We think it immaterial whether he knew the representations to be false or not, if he made the statement as a statement of fact, and it had an effect upon the matter of the purchase by the appellant, who had a right to rely upon it. The person making a statement, or representation of a material fact, upon which other persons may rely, is guilty of fraud if the representation is untrue in fact, regardless of whether the person making it believes it to be the truth.
We think, also, there is no dispute about the speedometer having been set back.
In the absence of explanation, it would seem that it was done for the purpose of deceiving prospective buyers, and if done for this purpose, of course, it would amount to fraud resulting from concealment of material facts, when truth and fair dealing call for a disclosure of the facts, or, at least, the doing of no act that would conceal such facts.
For the error indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.