189 P. 440 | Cal. | 1920
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *540 Action for damages for fraudulent representations whereby defendant procured an exchange of property between himself and plaintiff. Defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiff.
On May 22, 1913, plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement whereby plaintiff was to transfer to defendant a stock of merchandise in exchange for two parcels of real property belonging to defendant, one of which was in the city of Los Angeles and subject to a mortgage of three thousand dollars, and the other situated in Flathead County, Montana, and subject to a mortgage of one thousand *541 four hundred dollars. The transfers thus agreed upon were consummated the following June. Plaintiff alleges that in August, 1913, he first discovered the true value of the Montana property, which he claims had been misrepresented to him by the defendant. On September 10, 1913, plaintiff commenced an action against said defendant, in the superior court of Los Angeles County, wherein plaintiff sought to have the above-described contract rescinded. The trial court in that case granted defendant's motion for a judgment of nonsuit on the ground that plaintiff had failed to tender defendant a deed to said Montana property prior to bringing the action for rescission. The judgment, which was entered accordingly, has become final. Plaintiff then instituted the present action for damages resulting from the alleged fraudulent representations. In this action the trial court found, among other things, that the merchandise transferred by plaintiff was of the reasonable value of ten thousand dollars; that defendant fraudulently, and with intent to deceive plaintiff, represented to said plaintiff that the Montana property was of the fair and reasonable value of six thousand dollars and also represented to the plaintiff that the property in Los Angeles was of the reasonable value of eight thousand dollars, and that the equities in both parcels of real property were reasonably worth nine thousand five hundred dollars; that the true value of said property in Los Angeles was eight thousand dollars, "but said Montana property was not on said twenty-second day of May, 1913, or at any other time, of any greater value than the sum of two hundred dollars"; that there was a mortgage on the Los Angeles property amounting to three thousand dollars and on the Montana property amounting to one thousand four hundred dollars; and that the equities in both said parcels of real property were not at the time of making said contract, or at any other time, worth over five thousand dollars. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the sum of four thousand six hundred dollars.
The main contention in support of the appeal is that the plaintiff, having elected to proceed in an action for rescission, is now precluded from resorting to an action for damages. [1] It is insisted, upon behalf of appellant, that a party having two inconsistent, concurrent remedies may not *542
pursue both, but must choose between them and, having clearly elected to proceed upon one, is thereby bound and will be estopped from invoking the other. (Hines v. Ward,
[5] Error is claimed in the admission, over defendant's objection, of testimony as to the value of plaintiff's stock of goods. The objection was made upon the theory that, while the value of the property transferred to plaintiff was material for the reason that his cause of action depended upon the existence of misrepresentations as to the true value of said property, still the value of the property transferred by plaintiff could not be considered, for the reason that the contract related to the exchange of property only and did not purport to establish or refer to a pecuniary standard of value as to the basis of the deal. Not only was evidence of the value of the properties exchanged admissible under the issue of fraud for the purpose of showing the circumstances surrounding and attending the making of the contract (Beverly v. Blackwood,
The testimony of the witness Sugarman as to the value of the merchandise was not necessarily incompetent even though it referred to such value at a time some months prior to the date of the execution of the contract in suit. [6] While such value on the date in question was the precise thing to be determined, nevertheless the admission of evidence of such value at times shortly prior or subsequent to the date in question was largely within the discretion of the trial court, and we are not prepared to say that, under the circumstances, the discretion was abused. (Montgomery v. *544 Sayre,
Several assignments of error and specifications of insufficiency of evidence to support the findings of fact are made and based upon the claim that plaintiff failed to prove any fraudulent representations by defendant by which plaintiff was induced to enter into the agreement. The testimony upon this phase of the case is, in substance, as follows: Plaintiff, being desirous of disposing of his stock of merchandise, placed it in the hands of Morris Reiss, his wife's nephew, for sale at the price of ten thousand dollars. Reiss was in the real estate business for himself, but having his office with the defendant, and an understanding with the defendant that all commissions earned by him were to be shared equally with defendant. Reiss and defendant discussed the possibility of trading defendant's Los Angeles and Montana land for plaintiff's stock and agreed, in effect, that, if the exchange could be brought about, Reiss was to receive from the defendant the sum of two hundred dollars as commission for his services. At that time defendant told Reiss that he had never seen the Montana land; that he had bought it about two years before from a man named Fisher for two thousand two hundred dollars, paying eight hundred dollars in cash and giving a mortgage for the balance of the purchase price; that Fisher told him the land was worth $150 an acre, and was good land for subdividing, in which case $250 an acre might be realized; that some Norwegian friends of the defendant, who were familiar with the land, said it was good apple land because of the elevation and soil. Defendant further stated: "I'll stake my life on it that Fisher tells me the truth," and referred Reiss to Fisher, who was at that time living in Southern California. Reiss reported to plaintiff, in substance and effect, what defendant had told him about the land, but did not inform plaintiff that defendant had never seen the Montana land. Plaintiff objected to taking land which he himself had never seen and, upon Reiss so reporting, the defendant then said to Reiss that, if plaintiff took the land, he would later trade it off for plaintiff for "local holdings." This was reported by Reiss to plaintiff. The night before the contract was signed, Reiss' wife received a letter from Montana, in response to inquiries made by her concerning *545 the value of the Montana land. This letter stated that the forty acres of land in question were valueless by themselves, for the reason that they consisted entirely of a very high hill, which was too steep for farming and not good for pasture because of a large ledge of rock running through it; the letter further stated that if the owner purchased the balance of the quarter-section, the land in question would be worth something. Reiss and his wife took this letter to the defendant, who informed himself of its contents. Defendant thereupon stated that the writer must have had the wrong description "or else someone was knocking," and again said to Reiss that the land was worth $150 an acre and that he would positively guarantee that everything was just as he had said. Reiss and his wife both testified that defendant requested them not to show the letter to plaintiff as it would spoil the deal. There is testimony that defendant stated to Reiss that he had refused an offer of one hundred dollars an acre for the land. The letter in question was not called to the attention of plaintiff, and the following morning the contract was signed. While Reiss was drawing up the contract, the defendant stated to plaintiff's daughter, in the presence of plaintiff, "Your father is making a good trade. That Montana land is worth $150 an acre and will soon be worth $250 an acre. It is fine apple land. If you were to take the mortgage of three thousand dollars off the University property and put it on the Montana land and take the mortgage of one thousand four hundred dollars off the Montana land and put it on the University property, I would take the Montana land every time."
In contending that the evidence as thus outlined does not support the findings complained of, it is argued that Reiss was the agent of the plaintiff, and that, therefore, the knowledge of Reiss, obtained from the defendant, was that of the plaintiff. Ordinarily, the knowledge of an agent is imputed to his principal. (Civ. Code, sec.
[9] With reference to the contention that the evidence does not support the findings in question because the alleged and found fraudulent misrepresentations were but mere expressions of opinion, it will suffice to say that, when a statement concerning a subject matter of a transaction, which might otherwise be only an expression of opinion, is affirmed as an existing fact material to the transaction and reasonably induces the other party to consider and rely upon it as a fact, the statement then becomes an affirmation of fact within the meaning of the general rule as to fraudulent representations. (2 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, 4th ed., sec. 878.) This rule is frequently, and properly, applied to statements concerning the value of land at a distance when the party to whom the statements are made possesses no other information and is not in a position to investigate. (Crandall v. Parks,
It is claimed that defendant's statements made, while the contract was being drafted, to plaintiff's daughter were inadmissible because it was not shown that plaintiff heard them and that, in any event, it cannot be fairly said that they formed any part of the inducements to the making of the contract, since the terms of the contract had been previously agreed upon and were actually being reduced to writing at the time the statements were made. No objection was made to the questions which upon direct examination elicited the testimony concerning the statements complained of, but, upon cross-examination, the witness, plaintiff's daughter, declared that nobody else but she and a Mrs. Orlejan heard the statements. Thereupon counsel for appellant moved to strike out the daughter's testimony concerning the statements of the defendant made at the time the contract was being drafted, upon the ground that they were immaterial and irrelevant. The ruling of the trial court denying the motion is assigned as error. Of course, if the plaintiff did not hear the statements complained of, they were not material and relevant as a part of the misrepresentations which, it was claimed, induced the plaintiff to enter into the agreement in controversy. Strictly speaking, the motion to strike out should have been preceded by a previously stated and sufficient objection made at the time of the introduction in evidence of the statements complained of, but, assuming, as may perhaps be properly done, that the nature of the testimony of the witness upon direct examination was not such as to put counsel for appellant upon notice of its irrelevancy and immateriality, and that, therefore, he was not required to interpose an objection upon those grounds before he could avail himself of a motion to strike out, still the record shows that, in addition to his daughter's testimony, the plaintiff testified concerning the making of the statements, in effect and without objection, that they were made in his presence, and the fair import of his testimony in this *548 particular, as shown by the record, is that he heard the statements. [12] It is apparent, therefore, that there was a substantial conflict in the evidence as to whether or not the plaintiff heard the statements in question, and this being so the error, if any, in the ruling of the trial court refusing to strike out the testimony of the daughter in the particulars stated was harmless. Even though the statements in question were made after the terms of the agreement had been arrived at, we think it cannot be fairly said that they formed no part of the cause which ultimately induced the plaintiff to finally execute the contract. This being so, the statements in question had a material and relevant bearing, to some extent at least, upon the issue of whether or not the plaintiff's participation in the agreement was procured as the result of fraudulent misrepresentations.
[13] There is no merit in the contention that the action should have been dismissed because of defendant's attempted rescission of the contract prior to the commencement of the present action. Defendant had sold the stock of merchandise before making the offer to rescind, and therefore the trial court did not err in concluding that, even if defendant were able to obtain the merchandise from his vendee, he was not able to restore plaintiff to his original position.
The judgment is affirmed.
Lawlor, J., Wilbur, J., Kerrigan, J., pro tem., Angellotti, C. J., Shaw, J., and Olney, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices concurred, except Shaw, J., and Wilbur, J., who were absent. *549