Plaintiffs Henry J. and Zae H. Harazim, husband and wife, and Dorothy R. Duncan appeal from judgments of dismissal entered in these consolidated actions after general demurrers were sustained without leave to amend as to defendants Warren F. McLaren Applegate and George Lynam.
Appellants originally filed sеparate complaints based on essentially similar facts against all of the same defendants. These cases, which arose out of similar transactions, were consolidated for trial. The motions of defendants Applegate and Lynam for judgments on the pleadings were treated by the court аs demurrers and denied with leave to amend. Plaintiffs thereafter several times amended their pleadings and each time general and/or special demurrers thereto were sustained. Finally, the court sustained general and special demurrers to the fourth amended complaints without leave to аmend and entered its judgments dismissing the actions as to Applegate and Lynam. Plaintiffs have appealed from these judgments.
The fourth amended complaint in the Harazim action alleges generally the mutual agency and conspiracy of the defendants and further alleges that defendants devised a sсheme for selling to the public interests in a “pretended investment business, partnership enterprise, and joint venture termed by them science of money course” with the intention of converting to their own use and benefit monies thus obtained from plaintiffs and the public “and forever depriving plaintiffs thereof.” The Harazims’ complaint alleges further that they paid to defendants specified sums “as and for such interests in said pretended science of money course” relying on certain representations made by defendants which were false and were known by defendants to be false when made, and which defendаnts made without having any intention of conducting any business but with the intention instead of misrepresenting “in pursuance of the said plan and scheme, and all for the purpose of mulcting the plaintiffs and of converting all of said monies to their own use and benefit.” Later, the complaint alleges, the defendants, aсting through Joseph R. Brauner, delivered to the Harazims a sham promissory note made on a printed form prepared for notes payable to the Bank of America. Finally the complaint alleges that the plaintiffs were damaged in the sum of $10,000 and requests punitive damages for fraud. In a second cоunt the complaint sets forth an action for money had and received. The two counts of the complaint filed by Dorothy R. Duncan are essen *130 tially the same except that she allegedly paid defendants $5,000.
Despite certain ambiguities in the allegations of ultimate fact, we clearly perceive the cause of action which appellants have inexpertly stated. Appellants in essence claim that they were induced by defendants’ misrepresentations, made to them pursuant to defendants’ conspiracy to defraud appellants and other members of the public, to pay to defendants specified sums of money to purchase interests in an enterprise established by defendants and lmown by them to be merely a sham or pretended business. As a result of their reliance upon defendants’ false representations, appellants received nothing for their money exсept a fraudulent promissory note. It is evident from the complaint that the apparent weakness of the pleading is due in part to appellants’ confusion as to terminology deliberately utilized by defendants. Defendants allegedly referred to the purported business interests they were selling as “mеmberships,” “contributing associates,” “pure trust indentures,” “certificates” and “shares” at various times.
“The elements of fraud, which give rise to the tort action for deceit, are (1) misrepresentation ... ; (2) knowledge of falsity . . . ; (3) intent to defraud, i.e., to induce reliance; (4) justifiable reliance; and (5) resulting damage.” (2 Witkin, Summary of California Law 1372;
Seeger
v.
Odell,
Respondents contend that the misrepresentations relied upon by appellants in their complaint constitute promises of future profits and statements of legal opinions made by laymen, neither of which constitutes sufficient basis for a fraud *131 action. If these complaints exhibit a genuine frailty, it does indeed lie in the allegations of specific misrepresentations made by defendants which are set forth in paragraph V. Paragraph V of each complaint alleges that defendants made the following misrepresentations: that a “contributing associate” (a term designating the purchaser of an interest by referenсe to paragraph III of the complaint) creating a trust under defendants’ trust plan could continue to manage and enjoy the assets which would be free from liability for his personal debts and from probate costs and death taxes at the purchaser’s death; that the trust indenture 1 ‘ offered for salе” was copyrighted by defendants; that the state could not regulate the trust defendants offered; that defendants had created such a trust for the family of John P. Kennedy, formerly president of the United States; that attorneys and banks would, if consulted, pretend to be ignorant or would conceal their knowledge оf the validity of such trusts; and that income accruing to the trust would not be taxable to the trust entity. That paragraph further alleges that appellants paid money to defendants in reliance upon the foregoing representations.
Standing alone, these allegations would not be sufficient to constitutе actionable misrepresentations. The representations relied upon must ordinarily be affirmations of fact (Civ. Code, § 1710) ; misrepresentations of law or legal opinions expressed by laymen are insufficient
(Haviland
v.
Southern Cal. Edison Co.,
*132 Appellants’ opening brief clarifies the significance of the specific misrepresentations alleged in paragraph V of their complaints. Appellаnts therein point ont that during 1961 and 1962 respondents and defendant Brauner by written advertising in newspapers, hand bills and prospectuses, solicited enrollments in and conducted what they called the “Science of Money Course.” Those members of the public who answered newspaper advertisements received additional advertising literature and many ultimately enrolled for a fee in the purported course. The named defendants gave lectures in the course in which they held themselves out as experts on money management and as authorities on investments of various kinds and the legal consequenсes thereof. In this guise they solicited funds from members of the public who attended the course. Appellants were enticed by the advertising to attend a meeting or meetings of the course and were persuaded by defendants ’ oral and written representations, including those set forth in paragraph Y and оthers made in defendants’ advertising literature, to pay funds to defendants for the acquisition of interests in the venture. Later defendants falsely represented to appellants that their funds had been invested, that profits had been received, and that these profits were being reinvested for them. In fact, Apрle-gate and Lynam and defendant Brauner converted the payments made to them by appellants to their own use and did not invest the funds for appellants’ benefit as promised and did not obtain profits of any kind for appellants.
If the circumstances are, indeed, those set forth in appellants’ brief, then the defendants set themselves forth as persons occupying positions of superior knowledge and as experts whose opinions may be relied upon and treated as representations of fact constituting actionable fraud. “ ‘Wherever a party states a matter which might otherwise be only an opinion, and does not state it as the mere expression of his own opinion, but affirms it as an existing fact material to the transaction, so that the other party may reasonably treat it as a fact and rely and act upon it as such, then the statement clearly becomes an affirmation of fact within the meaning of the general rule, and may be a fraudulent misrepresentation. ’ ”
(Crandall
v.
Parks,
Appellants may, in addition, desire to clarify their pleadings to allege that respondents took money from appellants with the promise that it would be invested in some specified manner, but that this was not done because at the time they made the statements respondents had no intention to perform. A promise to do something necessarily implies the intention to perfоrm, and, where such intention is absent, there is an implied misrepresentation of fact, which is actionable fraud. (Civ. Code, §1710, subd. 4;
Valdez
v.
Taylor Automobile Co.,
These additional grounds for a cause of action in fraud are implied from the pleadings and stated in appellants’ opening brief. Appellants are entitled to a reasonable opportunity to amend and clarify their pleadings in the respects pointed out above, pursuant to their request.
(Wen
*134
nerholm
v.
Stanford University School of Medicine,
Pleadings and amendments thereto should be allowed and construed liberally with the object of affording every litigant his day in court and to render substantial justice between the parties.
(Speegle
v.
Board of Fire Underwriters,
The judgments of dismissal are reversed on the grounds that each complaint states a cause of action in fraud. It is further ordered that appellants be given 30 days after the going down of the remittitur further to amend their complaints.
Wood, P. J., and Lillie, J., concurred.
