27 P.2d 643 | Cal. | 1933
Defendants appeal from a money judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff.
Plaintiff is the assignee of fifty-one individuals who purchased memberships in the Deauville Beach Company through the instrumentality of the Deauville Holding Company. The Beach Company is a nonprofit corporation organized under the laws of this state. The Holding Company is a corporation organized in Nevada and authorized to do business in this state. The incorporators planned to construct a beach clubhouse in Santa Monica upon land to be purchased by the Nevada corporation and club memberships were sold by agents of the Holding Company through means of a prospectus giving elaborate details regarding the type of building and the facilities to be offered club members.
The plaintiff pleaded three causes of action and had judgment upon the second cause only. This cause is a simple action for damages for fraudulent representations which the trial court found were the inducements which led plaintiff's assignors to part with certain sums of money and which the court found caused damages in the precise amounts so paid. It would serve no useful purpose to detail the representations of fact upon which the plaintiff relied and which the trial court found were made without intent to perform — it is sufficient to refer to one relating to the type of structure to be erected. It is alleged and found that defendants' agents represented to the purchasers that two buildings would be erected for the use of club members, one to be twelve stories in height and to contain five hundred sleeping-rooms; that a gymnasium, outdoor plunge, nursery and special autoparking facilities would be provided. The court found that but one building was constructed and that no sleeping-rooms and none of the other promised facilities was included. It is alleged in the complaint that the failure to fulfill these promises depreciated the value of the memberships. *500
[1] The sale having been made upon representations affecting the value of the thing sold, the vendees are entitled to recover damages for the fraud practiced upon them. The measure of such damages is the difference between the actual value of the property purchased and the value it would have had if the representations had been true. (Spreckels v. Gorrill,
In his first cause of action plaintiff sued for "money had and received" under the theory that the contracts were all void "abinitio", because they were executed before the corporation had legal authority to contract. In his second cause the plaintiff elected to affirm the contracts and to sue for damages for the fraud. The third cause was in equity to impress a trust. The court below denied recovery upon the first and third causes of action and limited its judgment to the second.
[2] We are thus faced with the pertinent question whether an action in tort of this character is capable of assignment. The authorities on the subject are collected and the principles of law announced in our recent decision in Wikstrom v. YoloFliers Club,
"But, supplementing said general doctrine, it must be said that sections
The Wikstrom case, supra, refers with approval to McCord v.Martin,
In our opinion the quotations from the cited cases are determinative of the present appeal. [3] There is ample evidence in the record now before us to support the trial court's findings that the plaintiff's assignors by reason of fraudulent representations were induced to part with $5,929.60, the exact amount of damages here sought and recovered, in exchange for which they received club memberships found to be valueless. In other words, property of the plaintiff's assignors was acquired and their estate diminished by fraud and deceit. This being so, the causes of action transferred to the plaintiff, and here sued on, are not, within the meaning of the cited cases, naked, unassignable causes of action for fraud unconnected with any property or thing which had itself a legal existence and value independent of the right to sue for fraud. [4] The form of assignment to plaintiff was sufficient to cover the property rights and claims of his assignors in and to the moneys so obtained by fraud and deceit and, therefore, represents and constitutes a transfer of more than a mere naked right of action for fraud and deceit, since it includes *503 also the right to recover the respective sums of money so obtained.
Our conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider other points discussed by the parties.
The judgment is affirmed.
Preston, J., Thompson, J., Shenk, J., Seawell, J., Langdon, J., and Curtis, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.