Sutter v. Rose

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a suit in assumpsit brought by appellee against appellant upon an assumption clause contained in a certain deed made by one Charles H. Peckham and wife to the appellant, conveying certain lots in the city of Wichita, Kansas, dated May 27, 1890, for an expressed consideration of $3,005.

That clause followed the covenants of general warranty, and expressed an exception thereto, and was as follows :

“ Except a mortgage to secure a note for $1,600, dated April 5, 1889, with interest at eight per cent per annum, due on or before three years from date, which the grantee assumes and agrees to pay.”

There is no question but the note and mortgage referred to in said clause belonged to the appellee, and remained wholly unpaid.

The firm of Sutter Brothers, of Chicago, held a claim then in suit against Peckham, who seems to have lived in Wichita, and the deed containing said clause was executed and delivered in purported settlement of said claim.

It was proved that the consideration named in the deed was made up of the amount due on the mortgage and the sum of Peckham’s indebtedness to Sutter Brothers.

The main contention of the appellant is, that he never agreed to accept a deed from Peckham by which he should assume the note and mortgage, and that the execution of the deed in the manner 'indicated was a fraud upon him. He does not contend that he did not agree to accept a conveyance of the property subject to the mortgage, in satisfaction of the indebtedness of Peckham to Sutter Brothers, nor that the deed did not come into his possession soon after it was made.

We think the evidence fairly showed what appellant contends was the fact, and that the deed was accepted by the attorneys for Sutter Brothers in the form that it was drawn without authority to do so.

But it is still more clearly established that appellant was charged with notice that the deed did contain the clause in question, and having such notice, that he did nothing to disaffirm the contract imposed upon him by the deed.

The deed was sent to appellant by his attorneys, in Kansas, either directly or through B. G. Dun & Co., and came to his hands in the summer of 1890, shortly after it was recorded. He testified that he put it away in the vault without reading it, and kept it from that time forward without objection, and did not know of the clause in question being in the deed until in 1892, when this suit was commenced, and that up to that time he did not know the legal effect of the clause as applied to himself.

Appellant admits that he personally wrote the following letter, which bears date nearly two years after the deed came into his possession, and about ten months before this suit was begun:

“Sutter Bros.,
LEAF TOBACCO,
155 and 157 Lake Street, Cor. La Salle St.
June 13, 1892.
Bailiff & Cone, Wichita, Kas.
Gentlemen : In reply to yours of the 11th, would say that we had a claim against C. H. Beckham, formerly of your city, which we sent to B. G. Dun & Co. for collection. Mr. Beckham made their attorney a proposition to take the land you inquire about in settlement of our claim, subject to a mortgage, we think, of about $1,600. The attorney settled the claim as above, but instead of taking a second mortgage, he took a deed of the property in the name of Adolph Sutter, for the firm of Sutter Bros., which was not according to our intentions, as we did not wish to assume any mortgage on this property and would not pay the mortgage at the present time. However, if you can get a chance to sell the property, we are willing to sell our portion of it at a reasonable price, so let us know by return mail what the best offer is that you can get, and if it is all satisfactory we would be willing to close out our interest in the land.
We have no agent in Wichita, except E. G. Dun & Co.’s attorney, who did the business for us, but whose name we do not remember at present. However, if you should want to know his name and address, let us know and we will find same out from E. G. Dun & Co. of this city. Let us hear from you as soon as possible, as to what the prospects are for disposing of the property, and oblige
Tours very truly,
A. S. Suttee Bbos.”

It would seem to be conclusive that at the time he wrote that letter he knew of the assumption clause in the deed; and that he knew somewhat of its legal effect is certain from the language he used.

The most that can be said is, that he may not have understood the full legal effect upon himself of the clause in the deed.

Taking no steps and doing nothing from that time on to disaffirm the contract so assumed by him, even though a fraud had been practiced upon him of which he had, previous thereto, no knowledge, he must be estopped from setting up the fraud as against appellee.

There is not the slightest evidence to show that appellee had any knowledge of the fraud claimed by appellant, but on the other hand it was shown that appellee changed his position with reference to the mortgaged premises from that of holder of the title by deed (though in fact a mortgage) to the less advantageous position of a direct mortgagee, for the purpose, as we must conclude under the circumstances, of facilitating the settlement between Peckham and appellant’s firm.

It is well established that a party to a fraudulent contract, who claims to have been defrauded, must disaffirm the contract at the earliest practicable moment after having discovered the fraud, and that, if he remains silent and continues to treat the property as his own, he will be held to have waived the objection and will be as conclusively bound by the contract as if the fraud had not occurred. Morey v. Pierce, 14 Ill. App. 91; Greenwood v. Fenn et al., 136 Ill. 146; Day v. Fort Scott Investment Co., 153 Ill. 293; Linington v. Strong, 97 Ill. 295; same case, 8 Ill. App. 436.

Although appellant was defrauded, yet, knowing it, his subsequent conduct was such as requires that he should be held to have elected to waive the fraud and stand by the contract.

His letter we regard as plainly conclusive against him in that respect, and we think it was not error to. ref use to permit the appellant to explain that his intention was other than was therein expressed.

Appellant, in his brief, expressly waives discussion of any error in the refusal of instructions offered by himself, but contends that there was error in those given in behalf of appellee.

The given instructions presented the case upon the theory of law already mentioned as applicable to the proved facts and circumstances, and we think correctly so.

We think that under the law applied to the evidence, the judgment was correct, and it will therefore be affirmed.