(after stating the facts.) Appellee’s assertion of the right to a rescission of the contract is based upon two grounds, viz: The alleged intoxicated condition of Powers when he negotiated the contract with appellants, and the failure of appellants to disclose information as to the true value of the timber in response to the letter written them by Mr. Jackson. The latter grounds may be disposed of by saying that the letter of Jackson can not be construed as a request for information as to the value of the timber, nor as an expression of reliance upon the judgment of appellants as to the value. “I hand you a copy of the contract,” the letter stated, “and if it is all right you can notify me. I will send check on receipt of your advice that it is all. right with you.” There is nothing in this to have put appellants upon notice that they were expected to inform the writer of the value or quantity of timber bargained for. On the contrary, they had a right to presume that Jackson was relying upon the judgment of Powers, who was an experienced timber man, and was engaged in the business of making railroad ties for appellee in that locality. Nor can a warranty of the quantity of the timber be implied from the circumstances under which the bargain was negotiated and consummated. The tract of timber land was open to the inspection of either party alike, and the undisputed testimony shows that appellants had owned the land scarcely a month, had never inspected it, and had no information as to the quantity of timber except that there were about 33 acres of the tract cleared and in cultivation. The parties were dealing with ea'ch other upon equal footing, and mere inadequacy of the consideration, however gross, will not avoid the contract.
The controlling principles as to the right to rescind a contract because of intoxication are fully stated by this court in the case of Taylor v. Purcell, 60 Ark. 606. “It is only when one is so. completely intoxicated as to be incapable of knowing what he is doing,” said the court, “or of understanding the consequences of his acts, that his contracts, entered into while in that state, are thereby rendered void. 2 Kent, Com. 451; Gore v. Gibson, 13 Mees. & W. 623; Bates v. Ball, 72 Ill. 108; Schramm v. O’Conner, 98 Ill. 541; Johns v. Fritchey, 39 Md. 258. Where the defense is that the contract or note was procured through fraud, the court or jury trying the case may take into consideration, along with the other surrounding circumstances, the condition of the contracting parties at the time of making the contract, whether either of them was to any extent under the influence of intoxicating drink, in order to determine whether the contract was procured through fraud or not. But, in the absence of fraud, the intoxication to invalidate a contract must be such as to temporarily dethrone reason and judgment.”
The case in which this doctrine is announced was an action at law to recover upon a contract where the defendant pleaded intoxication as a defense, but no different rule prevails in equity where suit is brought to rescind the contract. 14 Cyc. p. 1106; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 949; 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 231; Rodman v. Zilley, 1 N. J. E. 320; Maxwell v. Pittenger, 3 N. J. E. 156; Keough v. Foreman, 33 La. Ann. 1434; Caulkins v. Fry, 35 Conn. 170; Cavender v. Waddingham, 5 Mo. App. 457.
Judge Story states the rule thus: “But, to set aside any act or contract on account of drunkenness, it is not sufficient that the party is under undue excitement from liquor. It must rise to that degree which may be called excessive drunkenness, where the party is utterly deprived of the use of his reason and understanding; for in such a case there can, in no just sense, be said to be a serious and deliberate consent on his part, and without this no contract or other act can or ought to be binding by the law of nature. If there be not that degree of excessive drunkenness,' then courts of equity will not interfere at all unless there has been some contrivance or management to draw the party into drink, or some unfair advantage taken of his intoxication to obtain an unreasonable bargain or benefit from him.” 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 231.
The evidence in this case does not establish intoxication on the part of Powers to the extent that he was incapable of knowing what he was doing or of understanding the consequences of his acts. At most, it shows only that he was under the influence of liquor to such extent as to materially affect his judgment.
It is true, Powers says in his deposition, “I could not have known what I was doingbut he does proceed to relate many of the details of the negotiations between himself and Cook, as well as some of the incidents of the meeting in the office of the attorney in Wynne when the contract was prepared, and he states that Cook first proposed to accept $2.00 per acre for the timber, which offer he (Powers) declined and offered to give $1.00 per acre. Both of the Cooks testify that he was not excessively drunk when he made the trade.
There is no proof at all that Powers’ state of intoxication was induced by appellants, or that any advantage was sought or taken of his condition except that they made a bargain with him which subsequently developed to be a disadvantageous one for the purchaser of the timber. This, however, was through no fault or connivance of appellants, so far as the testimony discloses. As we have already stated, appellant had owned the land only about a month, and had no information concerning the quantity of timber thereon. They were wholly without experience in the timber business, whilst Powers was an experienced timber man, was then engaged in working timber into ties in that locality, and appellants had reason to believe that he had recently estimated the timber on this land. It is not claimed that they made any representations to Powers or any one else concerning the quantity or quality of timber on the land — the record is utterly void of any evidence of such representation, either directly or by inference. Nor is there anything in the attitude of the parties toward each other which called for a statement from one to the other as to knowledge concerning the quantity of timber. It is clearly a case where both parties “guessed at” the quantity of timber on about 375 acres of timber land without inspecting it, and the party who was worsted in the bargain is without remedy for relief against its hárdship. Doubtless, Mr. Jackson was under the belief that Powers had inspected and estimated the timber, and relied upon his (Powers’) judgment as to its quantity and value, but that is his misfortune. Appellants were without fault, so far as the proof discloses, and they can not be held responsible because Powers failed in his duty, nor can their bargain be annulled on that account, however improvident and burdensome to appellee it may appear to be.
Opinion delivered April 30, 1906.We are therefore of the opinion that the learned chancellor was wrong in his conclusion, and that his decree annulling the contract must be reversed, with directions to dismiss the complaint for want of equity. It is so ordered.