Supreme
Court of Canada
Cole v. Pope, (1898) 29
S.C.R. 291
Date: 1898-12-14
John
Y. Cole (Defendant) Appellant;
and
Rufus
H. Pope (Plaintiff) Respondent
1898: November
07; 1898: December 14
Present: Sir
Henry Strong C.J. and Gwynne, Sedgewick, King and Girouard JJ.
On Appeal From The Supreme Court of British Columbia
Contract—Rescission—Innocent
misrepresentation—Common error—Sale of land—Failure of consideration.
An
executed contract for the sale of an interest in land will not be rescinded for
mere innocent misrepresentation.
But
where, by error of both parties and without fraud or deceit, there has been a
complete failure of consideration a court of equity will rescind the contract
and compel the vendor to return the purchase money. Thus where, on the sale of
a mining claim, it turned out that the whole property sold was included in
prior claims whereby the purchaser got nothing for his money the contract was
rescinded though the vendor acted in good faith and the transaction was free
from fraud.
APPEAL
from a decision of the Supreme Court of British Columbia
reversing the judgment at the trial in favour of the defendant.
In
June, 1896, the defendant and others had taken up a gold mining claim in the
neighbourhood of Rossland, British Columbia, of which he claimed and
represented himself to be the owner of one-half. This claim was designated as
the "Eldorado." The plaintiff, through his agent, Oscar G. Laberee,
believing the representations of the defendant to be true and relying entirely
on such representations, became the purchaser of the undivided half of the
claim for the sum of $5,250, which Laberee paid to the defendant in cash,
[Page 292]
who
therefore executed an assignment of his undivided half to the plaintiff. Soon
afterwards it turned out that the greater part of the "Eldorado" plot
was included within the limits of the prior claim called "Mascot,"
and that a strip which remained containing an area of some ten or fifteen acres
was included in other claims. The plaintiff therefore got nothing for the money
he paid. The defendant made the sale in perfect good faith, and his
representation which turned out to be untrue was innocently made and the
transaction was free from fraud. Both parties dealt upon the mistaken belief
that the "Eldorado" was an actually existing mining right, whereas in
truth, owing to other claims which were entitled to priority having been
previously made, the whole of the "Eldorado" was included in pre-existing
claims.
The
plaintiff brought his action for rescission of the contract and return of the
purchase money. Mr. Justice McColl who tried the case held that rescission
would not be decreed for mere innocent misrepresentation and dismissed the
action. His judgment was reversed by the full court and judgment entered for
the plaintiff. The defendant then took an appeal to this court.
Clute Q.C. for the appellant. To
obtain rescission of an executed contract fraud must be proved; Bell v. Macklin;
even when there has been a mistake by which the party seeking relief has
suffered injury; Allen v. Richardson;
Clare v. Lamb;
Ducondu v. Dupuy.
Travers Lewis and Hamilton for
the respondent referred to Granger v. Fotheringham
Huddersfield
[Page 293]
Banking Co. v. Henry Lister & Son; Cooper
v. Phibbs;
Hart v. Swaine.
The
judgment of the court was delivered by:
THE
CHIEF JUSTICE.—The facts of this case are few and simple. In June, 1896, the
appellant and others had taken up a gold mining claim in the neighbourhood of
Rossland, British Columbia, of which claim the appellant claimed and
represented himself to be the owner of one-half. This claim was designated as
the "Eldorado." The respondent, through his agent, Oscar G. Laberee,
believing the representations of the appellant to be true and relying entirely
on such representations, became the purchaser of the appellant's undivided half
of the claim for the sum of $5,250, which Laberee paid to the appellant in
cash, who thereupon executed an assignment of his undivided half to the
respondent. Soon afterwards it turned out that the greater part of the
"Eldorado" plot was included within the limits of a prior claim
called the "Mascot," and that a strip which remained containing an
area of some ten or fifteen acres was included in other claims. The respondent
therefore got nothing for the money he paid. There can be no doubt on the
evidence that the appellant represented himself to be the owner and made the
sale in perfect good faith; that his representation which turned out to be
untrue was innocently made and that the transaction was free from fraud. In
short both parties dealt upon the mistaken belief that the "Eldorado"
was an actually existing mining right, whereas in truth, owing to other claims
which were entitled to priority having been previously made, the whole of the "Eldorado"
was included in pre-existing claims.
[Page 294]
The
respondent brought this action to have the contract rescinded and to obtain
repayment of the money which he had paid for a consideration which had entirely
failed. The action was tried before the present Chief Justice of British
Columbia (then Mr. Justice McColl), and that learned judge acting upon what he
considered to be the law applicable to the case, dismissed the action. On
appeal to the full court (Walkem and Drake JJ.), this judgment was reversed and
a judgment entered for the respondent. The learned trial judge considered the
respondent's right to rescission dependent entirely on the misrepresentation,
and held that in the present state of the law an executed contract—and
especially an executed contract for the sale of an interest in land—will not be
rescinded for mere innocent misrepresentation. That this was a correct view of
the law as administered by Courts of Equity up to the date of the amalgamation
of jurisdictions effected by the judicature Acts, and as it has existed down to
the present time, I am not upon the authorities able positively to controvert.
Strange as it may seem that there should be dearth of authority upon such a
point I find that with the exception of one case, that of Legge v. Croker,
there is no direct authority upon the point. That case of Legge v. Croker
supports the judgment of the chief justice, as Lord Manners there held that to
entitle a party to have rescission of an executed contract for the sale of land
upon the ground of misrepresentation there must be fraud. There are no doubt dicta
the other way emanating from judges, some of great authority, for we find Sir
Edward Sugden, Lord Justice Turner and Sir George Jessel, all stating the law
to be that such a contract would be rescinded for innocent misrepresentation,
provided, of course, that it formed the basis
[Page 295]
of
the contract. It would not, however, be safe to act on these dicta. Mr.
Dart in the 6th edition of his work on Vendors and Purchasers,
has this passage which I think a fair statement of the law. The learned writer
says:
A
Court of Equity would not only refuse its discretionary remedy of specific
performance, but would go further and restrain a vendor from asserting his
legal right to claim damages in a court of law, on the ground that it was
unconscientious in him to do so. But the principle would not be extended to the
taking away after completion the price of the property, which at law had become
absolutely the vendor's, without advancing the interference of the Court of
Equity further than has yet been authorized by judicial decision. In other
words it seems that misrepresentation is no ground for setting aside an
executed contract, unless such misrepresentation would be not only sufficient
to afford ground in equity for rescission of an executory contract, but also is
deceitful in contemplation of a court of law. Whether or not this limitation of
the jurisdiction of Courts of Equity is satisfactory, either in practice or in
principle, the present state of the authorities justifies its enunciation.
Sir
Edward Fry in his treatise on Specific Performance (2 ed.) p. 295, commenting
on Edwards v. M'Leay,
says:
But
it must not thence be inferred that every representation that the vendor has a
good title will enable a purchaser to set aside an executed contract or
successfully resist specific performance.
I
conclude therefore in favour of the proposition that mere innocent
misrepresentation will not warrant the rescission of an executed contract for
the sale of an interest in land.
There
is, however, another principle which I think may be invoked in the respondent's
favour and which is quite open to him on the pleadings and evidence before us.
It
has been determined by several authorities and is well established law that
where by the mutual mistake of the parties to a contract of sale the subject of
the
[Page 296]
sale
turns out to be non-existent or is already the property of the purchaser, both
parties having fallen into error merely, and there being no fraud or deceit in
the case, the purchaser who has paid his purchase money and taken a conveyance
will be relieved and the contract rescinded by a Court of Equity. In such a
case where there is a complete failure of consideration as in the present case
it would be unjust and unconscientious that the vendor should retain money paid
to him for a supposed consideration which has utterly failed.
In
Bingham v. Bingham
Fortescue, M. R. holding that where it appeared that the estate for which the
purchase money had been paid already before the sale belonged to the purchaser
decreed rescission and said that
though
no fraud appeared and the defendant apprehended he had a right, yet there was a
plain mistake such as the court was warranted to relieve against, and not to suffer
the defendant to run away with the money in consideration of the sale of an
estate to which he had no right.
Sir
Edward Fry in the work already quoted from at page 337 (2 ed.), says:
Further,
where both parties to a contract are at the time of the contract in mistake or
error as to the matters in respect of which they are contracting, this will not
only furnish a ground for resisting specific performance but enable the court
to rescind the contract.
Dart
(6 ed. p. 907) has this passage:
If
it appear that the estate belonged to the purchaser, he can in equity, and
probably at law, recover his purchase money, although he might have discovered
his right from the abstract of title; nor is it clear that the absence of fraud
in the vendor will bar the relief. And it has been held that a purchaser who,
although without any fault on the part of the vendor, buys an estate which in
fact has no existence, (e. g. a remainder expectant on an estate tail which has
been barred), can obtain relief in equity; but it is of course otherwise if the
purchaser buys an estate the existence of which he knows to be doubtful. The
principle has been doubted by Lord St. Leonards,
[Page 297]
but
it has been decided that, even at law, an action lies in such a case to recover
the purchase money as money paid without consideration ;—as where a life
annuity is sold after the death of cestui qui vie.
In
Cooper v. Phibbs,
Lord Cranworth and Lord Westbury both recognized the authority of Bingham
v. Bingham
and acted on it in decreeing rescission in a case in which the facts were
essentially the same. The observations of Lord Cranworth leave no doubt as to
the principle that where there is by reason of a mistake of this kind an entire
failure of consideration, the completion of the contract by conveyance and
payment of the purchase money will constitute no bar to relief by a court of
equity.
In
Cochrane v. Willis,
Lord Romilly M.R., in the court below, and Lord Justice Turner in the Court of
Appeal, acted upon the authority of Bingham v. Bingham.
Further in Jones v. Clifford.
Vice Chancellor Hall, a very high authority on such a question, says speaking
of Cooper v. Phibbs.
Nothing
can be clearer than this, that Lord Cranworth recognized the principle that the
court would, even in the case of a completed contract, give relief against a
common mistake in the same way as it would against fraud.
Lord
Westbury in Cooper v. Phibbs,
says:
If
the parties contract under a mutual mistake and misapprehension as to their
relative and respective rights, the result is that that agreement is liable to
be set aside as having proceeded upon a common mistake.
See
also Webster on Conditions of Sale,
and Clerke & Humphrey on Sales.
The
result is that the evidence in this record being clear that the consideration
for the money paid by the
[Page 298]
respondent
to the appellant utterly failed, as indeed appears from the admission of the
appellant himself, the respondent upon the authorities referred to was entitled
to the relief the court below has given him and the appeal must be dismissed
with costs.
Appeal
dismissed with costs.
Solicitor
for the appellant: John S. Clute, Jr.
Solicitor
for the respondent: Charles R. Hamilton.