Edmunds v. Gwynn

Hudgins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Complainants filed their bill to compel the vendee to specifically perform an auction sale contract of certain lots and buildings. The respondent answered and filed a cross bill praying that the contract be cancelled and the cash payment of ten per cent on the purchase price be refunded him. From a decree granting the prayer of the cross bill complainants appealed.

The appellants owned five lots, with buildings thereon, fronting on West Main street in the city of Danville. Three of the lots, known as the Edmunds Hospital, the Moorefield House and the Nurses’ Home, were located on the north side of the street, and the other lots, called the Herman Home and the Hodges House, were located on the south side of the street, facing the other property. The three lots on the north side of Main street were formerly used in connection with the Edmunds Hospital, but on the day of the sale were vacant, and had been for some time prior thereto.

The owners, 'desiring to sell the five lots, employed for that purpose the Ben Temple Land Company, a well-known real estate concern that specialized in selling real estate at public auction. The property after being -extensively advertised was exposed for sale at public auction in April, 1929. The terms of sale were ten per cent cash, balance to be paid in instalments extending over a period of twelve years, and to be secured by a deed of trust. The parties acting for the selling company on the day of sale were Ben Temple, the auctioneer,, who stood on a truck on the street in front of the property, a clerk, L. B. Handy, and three others called “ground men.” The duty of the ground men was to obtain bids on the property from those in at*531tendance and notify the auctioneer when they were successful in so doing. Sometimes the bidders communicated their bids directly to the auctioneer and sometimes through the ground men.

The appellee informed the auctioneer before the sale that he was interested in the three pieces of property on the north side of the street. The auctioneer stated to him that in that event he would first offer these three parcels separately and then together, with the right to accept the highest bid. This method of offering the property was publicly announced. After the three pieces had been offered separately, announcement was made that the combined bids totalled $40,750.00 and that bidding on them as a whole would start at those figures. The appellee bid $41,000.00, the property was cried out to him at that price, he signied the memorandum of sale and paid $4,100.00, the required ten per cent, in cash.

The appellee relies upon the following. circumstances to show fraud: The Herman House was cried out to a Mr. Lewis for $12,000.00. He signed the memorandum of sale and gave his check for $1,200.00, but either during the sale or immediately thereafter, with the consent of Dr. Edmunds, the check and memorandum were returned to him. Dr. Edmunds testified that the price of the property was less than he desired and Mr. Lewis was willing to withdraw his offer. There was no sale of this property. Apparently this transaction was bona fide.

When the Hodges lot was offered for sale Julius F. Baum made several bids, his highest and last bid was $8,000.00. The auctioneer continued to cry the property and as Baum was leaving the place of sale it was being cried at $11,000.00, and later he heard that it was knocked out to him at that price. As soon as the hammer fell on this lot a ground man reported to the auctioneer that it was no sale and the auctioneer “immediately forgot it.” Dr. Edmunds *532and the auctioneer said that there was some mistake about this bidding, but exactly how it occurred they could not say.

Some time after the sale, one of the attorneys employed by the appellee asked the auctioneer, Ben Temple, to give him the names of the parties who had bid upon the three pieces of property separately, stating that he desired to interest them, if possible, in purchasing the property from Mr. Gwynn; to which it is claimed the auctioneer replied that it was useless for him to try to find them, that “whoever bid was simply bidding to protect Dr. Edmunds.” The auctioneer denied making this statement, but said he could not remember the names of any of the bidders on the three pieces of property except R. A. James, Jr., and could not recall the amount of his bid nor for which piece of property he was bidding. No memorandum of agreement was signed by any of the parties who made separate bids, and neither the clerk nor the ground men were introduced as witnesses for either side. These facts suggest the effect fictitious bidding has upon an auction sale.

It seems that no cases involving puffing or by-bidding at auction sales have in recent years been decided by this court, although the question has been the subject of much litigation in the other States and in England. Two of the early Virginia decisions deal with the subject. The facts in the case of Hinde v. Pendleton (1799), Wythe 354, were that a by-bidder employed by the auctioneer, without specific authority from the seller, bid on the property offered for sale and thereby caused it to bring more than its true value. The court held that the fictitious bids constituted a fraud upon the real bidder and reduced the price of the property to its actual value as ascertained by the commissioner.

Judge Staples rendered the opinion in the other case of Brock v. Rice (1876), 27 Gratt. (68 Va.) 812, where a judicial *533sale was set aside because the auctioneer bought the property, claiming to be the agent of a person who was not present. It was said that no person employed or concerned in selling property at a judicial sale should be permitted to become the purchaser, or the agent for oné desiring to purchase; that it was the duty of the seller and his employees to obtain honestly the best price possible for the property and if he was interested in purchasing it for himself, or another, his interest and duty alike would prompt him to obtain the property upon more advantageous terms, and there was an irreconcilable conflict between the two positions.

The owner of property has a right to offer it for sale upon such terms, conditions and restrictions as he may elect. When, however, he elects to advertise it for sale at public auction to the highest bidder it is an invitation to all persons to attend and bid therefor on equal terms and is equivalent to a public statement on the seller’s part that the sale will be conducted openly, fairly and in good faith toward all parties.

The general rule in the United States Court, and in the majority of the State courts, is that unless the right is reserved in the seller to bid, fictitious bidding by the auctioneer or by any other person acting on behalf of the seller is a fraud on bona fide bidders. Veazie v. Williams, 8 How. 134, 12 L. Ed. 1018; McMillan v. Harris, 110 Ga. 72, 35 S. E. 334, 48 L. R. A. 345, 78 Am. St. Rep. 93; Osborn v. Apperson Lodge, 213 Ky. 533, 281 S. W. 500, 46 A. L. R. 117; note in 131 Am. St. Rep. 479, at page 488; Curtis v. Aspinwall, 114 Mass. 187, 19 Am. Rep. 332; Peck v. List, 23 W. Va. 338, 48 Am. Rep. 398; 2 R. C. L. 1128; 6 C. J. 833.

As opposed to this rule, it has been said that the property may be sacrificed for want of bidders. The answer to this objection is that the owner may set a specific sum, less than which he will not take, or he may reserve the right and *534publicly announce that he will bid on the property himself. Strictly speaking, a seller offering to buy his own property occupies an anomalous position. In such a case, however, there is no concealment and the bidders know exactly what to expect. “The whole and the real truth should be stated when the property is offered for sale.” Towle v. Leavitt, 23 N. H. 360, 55 Am. Dec. 195; Bowman v. McClenahan, 20 App. Div. 346, 46 N. Y. S. 945; Latham’s Exrs. v. Morrow, 6 B. Mon. (Ky.) 630; Jenkins v. Hogg, 2 Tread. Const. (S. C.) 821; Reynolds v. Dechaums, 24 Tex. 174, 76 Am. Dec. 101; 2 R. C. L. 1131.

One of the difficulties this case presents is raised by the following testimony: The auctioneer, within a day or two after the sale, went to see the appellee, Rice Gwynn, for the purpose of ascertaining just how he desired the deed transferring the property and the deed of trust securing the unpaid purchase price to be prepared. During this interview, Mr. Gwynn told him that he had examined the property before the sale and had bought it cheaper than he had expected. About that time Mrs. Gwynn came into the room and requested Mr. Temple to get Dr. Edmunds to let her husband out of the sale and that Mr. Gwynn said: “When I buy anything I buy it, and I don’t want anybody to take it back.”

This evidence is not denied, Mr. Gwynn was not called as a witness, and no attempt was made to meet the situation presented by it. The only inference that can be drawn is that Mr. Gwynn was thoroughly familiar with the property in question; that he had made up his mind before the sale what price he was willing to pay, and that he bought it at the sale cheaper than he had anticipated.

If we assume' that there was no mistake, but there was fictitious bidding, on the Hodges lot, the above evidence clearly establishes the fact that it did not influence the appellee in bidding on the three pieces of property.

One of the cases cited and relied upon by the appellee is *535Curtis v. Aspinwall, 114 Mass. 187, 19 Am. Rep. 332, where it is said that the ground upon which by-bidding at auction invalidates the sale is that a fraud is' practiced upon the purchaser, and that in such a case the burden of proof is upon the party alleging it not only to prove the fraud, but that he was influenced or damaged by it; that there is a presumption that real bidders upon the property are influenced and misled by secret by-bidding. “But this presumption''may be rebutted. If the by-bidding had 'no effect or influence upon the purchaser’s bid, the latter cannot avoid his contract. As in other cases where deceit or fraud is used in a sale, the purchaser cannot avoid it if he was not induced or influenced by the fraud to enter into the contract.”

The appellee relies upon a number of Virginia cases holding that this court will not reverse the trial court upon issues of fact unless the finding is against the preponderance of evidence, or without substantial evidence to support it. The trial court in the instant case rendered two opinions. In the first he granted the relief prayedf or by the appellants, and in the second he reversed himself and denied relief to the appellants and granted it to the appellee. This shows not only the conscientiousness of the chancellor in the court below, but also that he had decided doubts as to the correctness of his conclusion. We appreciate his difficulty. The case does not present one of determining the credibility of witnesses or a close question of disputed fact. The question is, were fraud and misrepresentation to be presumed against Dr. Edmunds because of the inability of his agent, Temple, to remember the names of the persons who made the separate bids on the three pieces of property? Dr. Edmunds states positively that.he had no by-bidders and knew nothing about any such bids. Mr. Temple is likewise emphatic in stating that he knew of no by-bidding. In its final analysis, the court is asked to cancel a contract on the ground of *536Temple’s failure to remember the names of the bidders and the contradicted statement that he said “whoever was bidding was simply protecting Dr. Edmunds.”

We are cited by the appellee to the case of Strickland v. Cantonwine, 140 Va. 193, 124 S. E. 292, and other Virginia cases which hold that a buyer of property has a right to rely upon representations made by the seller which are calculated to induce the buyer to enter into a contract on the faith of them. When such is the case and the seller claims that the purchaser did not rely upon the representations, the burden is upon him to prove by clear and satisfactory evidence that the buyer was not misled thereby.

This rule has no application to the case at bar because the record shows by uncontradicted testimony that the buyer stated in positive terms that he made up his mind prior to the day of the sale the amount he was willing to pay for the property and bought it at a smaller figure. If we assume that there was by-bidding on the property and that by reason of that fact the' buyer paid more for the property than he otherwise would have done, the inference is undoubted that he has been misled. In this case, however, the appellee is asking the aid of a court of equity to cancel a contract of sale on the ground of fraud, and the rule is that the proof of fraud must be clear and convincing, and such as to satisfy the conscience of the chancellor, who should be cautious not to lend too ready an ear to the charge. Redwood v. Rogers, 105 Va. 155, 53 S. E. 6; Hutcheson v. Savings Bank, 129 Va. 281, 105 S. E. 677.

The proof of fraud in the present case fails to measure up to this rule. There is no proof, but only an inference, that the appellee relied upon the alleged fraud. There is no proof, but only an inference, that he has been injured, as no evidence was introduced showing the value of the property. There is no proof, but only an inference, that the appellee was influenced or misled by anything that happened at *537the sale. There is positive and uncontradicted evidence showing that he was present during the entire sale and was an active participant therein, that he examined the property before the sale, exercised his own' judgment as to its value and bought it under the sum he thought it was worth. He did not avail himself of the opportunity to take the witness stand and inform the court how and under what circumstances he was misled or injured. There was error in granting the relief prayed for in the cross bill.

The appellee further contends that the complainants did not tender a marketable title to the property, and as a basis for this claim states that there was a wrongful dissolution of the corporation known as the Edmunds Hospital, Incorporated, because the. State Corporation Commission entered an order of dissolution upon an order purporting to be by unanimous consent of all the stockholders, and as a matter of fact those signing did not own all of the stock. The chancellor correctly held that the appellee had failed to prove this fact. Even if this finding on the question of fact were not sufficient, the minutes of the stockholders and directors show that on February 12, 1927, all of the stock of the corporation was represented and a sale of the property in the manner prescribed was authorized. The correctness of the minutes was not attacked. It follows that even though all of the stockholders did not consent to the dissolution, the sale of the property was duly authorized by the corporation.

For the reasons stated, the decree complained of is reversed, and the cause remanded to the lower court with direction to enter a decree directing specific performance of the contract of sale set out in appellants’ bill.

Note—Accordingly, on the first hearing the case was ordered to be reversed and remanded; Prentis, C. J., and Epes, J., dissenting.