129 P. 958 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1912
Appeal from a judgment entered in favor of plaintiff and from an order denying the motion of defendants for a new trial.
This action was brought to enforce rescission of an agreement for the exchange of real properties. Defendants Munger were the owners of a ranch which was located near Baldwin Park in the county of Los Angeles, and plaintiff was the owner of a lot located in the city of Los Angels upon which was erected a building containing several flats. Plaintiff's attention was attracted by an advertisement inserted by a real estate broker which represented defendants' property to consist of fifteen acres, highly improved with buildings, tankhouse, windmill, grove of five acres full-bearing oranges of the finest varieties, together with lemons, peaches, apricots, and other fruits, which would net, with proper care, four thousand dollars per year. Negotiations were entered into through the agent which resulted in the exchange of the properties being made. Prior to the conclusion of the deal plaintiff visited the ranch of defendants with her two sons, a daughter and son-in-law, and was shown over it by defendant E. M. Munger. In her complaint it was alleged, and the court found the facts to be, that defendants for the purpose of influencing and inducing plaintiff to make the exchange of *635 properties represented to plaintiff that the fifteen-acre ranch was highly improved; that five acres thereof was in young orange trees of the finest varieties in full bearing; that ten acres thereof was in assorted table grapes, six or seven years old; that the vineyard would yield from fifteen to twenty tons of grapes to the acre, and that the grapes would bring about twenty dollars per ton; that a packing house in the neighborhood would pick and haul the grapes and plaintiff would have nothing to do in marketing the grapes, except to count the boxes as they were hauled away; that the orange trees had produced four hundred and fifty boxes of oranges during the year 1908; that the soil was nice sandy loam, all similar to that shown to plaintiff; that the ranch was worth more than one thousand dollars an acre and was a bargain at fifteen thousand dollars; that it was a very profitable place and would net four thousand dollars a year on the investment; that there was a good pumping plant on the ranch for which the defendants Munger had paid two thousand five hundred dollars. These representations the court found to be untrue, and particularly that the Munger property was not at the time of the exchange, nor at any other time, worth more than seven thousand five hundred dollars; that the orange trees were not young trees, nor of the finest varieties; that a large part of the orange trees mentioned were seedlings and the balance were trees budded to the old stumps of a lemon orchard which had been cut down nearly level with the ground and earth heaped around the base of each tree so as to hide the stumps from view, and that the trees were budded in the year 1900 or 1901, and many of them subsequently rebudded; that the vineyard had never produced crops in a quantity which would nearly equal the quantity that Munger represented the vineyard would produce, and that the vineyard could not, on account of the nature of the soil, produce the quantity of grapes represented; that there was no grape packing house in the neighborhood of the ranch or anywhere in that vicinity; that the orange trees were not in full bearing, and that in the year 1908 they produced less than two hundred boxes of oranges; that the soil of the larger part of the ranch was inferior to that shown to plaintiff; that a wash, or old river bed, ran diagonally through the rear part of the ranch and constituted a large portion of the ranch; *636 that such portion contained very little soil and consisted almost wholly of sand and rock; that a large portion of the remainder of the ranch was rocky, and of poor quality; that it would be impossible to realize a net sum of four thousand dollars a year out of said ranch, or a net amount near that sum; that defendants Munger did not pay two thousand five hundred dollars for the pumping plant on said ranch, but only about the sum of one thousand two hundred dollars. The court further found that the plaintiff at the time of making the exchange of properties was fifty-two years of age and had been a widow only a short time; that she had never followed any occupation or business other than that of housewife; that her two boys, of the age of twenty-three and nineteen years respectively, and the daughter and son-in-law had never owned or lived upon a fruit ranch and had no experience or knowledge concerning fruit farming or fruit raising; that plaintiff was of a credulous disposition and did not have ordinary business experience and was lacking in ordinary business intelligence; further, that at the time plaintiff inspected the ranch of defendants she only went over a portion of it and made only a superficial examination of the orchard and vineyard and soil; that she did not make a more particular examination because of the representations made to her by Munger as to the superior character of the orange trees and vines, and their large producing qualities and the uniform quality of the soil. There was ample evidence to sustain all of these findings. And it was shown by the testimony that plaintiff gave notice of rescission as soon as she had discovered by actual experience and observation upon the property that the representations made to her by Munger as to the condition, value, and productive qualities of the ranch were untrue.
The contention is made on behalf of appellants that conceding, as it must be conceded because there was evidence to sustain the findings of the court, that the representations as found were made and that they were untrue, that they were not such representations as plaintiff was authorized to rely upon. It is insisted that the false statements all belong to a class denominated simplex commendatio, or those commonly and customarily used by a person in praise of his own property. In so far as the representations expressed a *637
prophecy as to what the ranch would produce in the future, no doubt those matters were matters of opinion which a person must accept as speculative surmises merely, and not as a representation of existing facts. (Lee v. McClelland,
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Allen, P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.