Ackerman v. Bramwell Inv. Co.

12 P.2d 623, 80 Utah 52, 1932 Utah LEXIS 4
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1932
DocketNo. 5165.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 12 P.2d 623 (Ackerman v. Bramwell Inv. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ackerman v. Bramwell Inv. Co., 12 P.2d 623, 80 Utah 52, 1932 Utah LEXIS 4 (Utah 1932).

Opinion

STRAUP, J.

This action was brought by Dolly Ackerman, the plaintiff, against the Bramwell Investment Company and W. P. White et ux., defendants, to recover $341 and interest as damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff on the ground of fraud and misrepresentation practiced by the investment company in the sale of a negotiable promissory note executed by the Whites to the investment company and by it sold to the plaintiff. The case was tried to the court, who on findings rendered judgment against the investment company in the sum of $398.32, including interest, from which judgment the investment company has prosecuted *54 this appeal. It complains on the ground that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, that the findings are not supported by the evidence, and that the conclusions of law and the judgment are not justified by the findings and are against law.

The material facts alleged by the plaintiff and testified to by her and found by the court, in substance, are that the investment company at Ogden was engaged in building houses on a tract of land owned by it and selling them on contracts on the installment plan. By the contract the company reserved the right to mortgage the premises in an amount not to exceed $3,000 providing the unpaid principal was in excess of the amount of the loan, and, when the principal was reduced to that amount, the company agreed to convey the premises to the purchaser who assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage. In December, 1926, the Whites executed such- a contract with the investment company to purchase a house and lot for the sum of $5,000, making, as recited in the contract, a first payment of $500', the receipt of which by the contract was acknowledged by the investment company. A similar contract was made by the company with a Mr. Tanner for a house and lot as a part of the same tract of land. As provided by the contracts, the investment company obtained a loan of $2,500 on each house and lot, and to secure the payment of the loans executed a mortgage on each house and lot, which the Whites and Tanner, respectively, assumed and agreed to pay. The contracts were put in escrow with a bank at Ogden. In February, 1927, such contracts were sold by the investment company to the plaintiff, who purchased them at a discount of 20 per cent. We are concerned only with the White contract. There was then unpaid on that contract, including interest, a balance of about $4,452. Deducting the amount of the mortgage therefrom left about $1,952 due on the contract. She paid approximately $2,800 for both contracts subject to the mortgages of $2,500 each which she assumed. After the purchase she left the contracts with the bank, where the *55 payments on. them were to be made 'by the Whites and Tanner.

On December 29, 1928, about a year and ten months after she had purchased the contracts, the investment company sold and delivered a negotiable promissory note dated April 1, 1928, of the face value of $473, executed by the Whites and payable to the order of the investment company. The note was payable in monthly installments of $10 each. Eight monthly payments of $10 each were indorsed on the note as having been paid, the first on May 4, 1928, and the last December 5, 1928. When the plaintiff purchased the note, there was a balance unpaid thereon including unpaid interest amounting to $416.31. She purchased the note also at a discount of 20 per cent, paying therefor $341. Later an error in computation of interest was discovered in favor of the plaintiff, amounting to $7.52, which was tendered back to her by the investment company. The note was not indorsed by the investment company. But, at the time the note was purchased, delivered, and transferred to the plaintiff, the investment company gave her a separate writing or instrument, not attached to the note, as follows:

“Ogden, Utah, December 29, 1928.
“Mrs. Dolly Ackerman, Ogden, Utah
“Dear Madam: For satisfactory consideration we, hereby sell and assign to you all of our interest in the note of Mr. & Mrs. W. P. White and agree that this note will be made part of your building contract, if you so decide at any time that you designate.
“Very truly yours,
“The Bramwell Investment Co.,
“By W. L. Bramwell, Pres."

Not anything was paid on the note after the plaintiff purchased it. White went into bankruptcy in June, 1929, a little more than six months after the plaintiff purchased the note. In January, 1930, White surrendered his contract and all rights he had therein to the plaintiff. She thereupon withdrew the contract from the bank, took pos *56 session of the premises and ever since has been in possession. She testified she did not know of White’s delinquency until in January, 1930, when he surrendered the contract. She brought this action in May, 1930. It is not made to appear what effort was made by her to collect the note from the Whites or either of them, or that any demand of payment was made on them, nor is it alleged that she made any demand on the investment company of payment of the note. Counsel for plaintiff in their brief say “We are not suing on the note but are suing the defendant (investment company) for damages for fraudulently selling the note to the plaintiff.”

With respect to the alleged fraud and misrepresentations, the plaintiff alleged and testified and the court found that, when she purchased the White contract in February, 1927,. the defendant represented that the first payment made thereon by White, the receipt of which by the contract was acknowledged, was paid in cash, which statement was false and was made by the investment company to cheat and defraud the plaintiff; that the only cash paid on the principal of the contract was $48 and $52 interest, and, while it is not expressly alleged nor testified to, nor found by the court, yet the inference is deduced that the balance of the $509 first payment was paid by a note of the Whites to the investment company. But it is not alleged nor testified to nor found that the Whites were not, or that the plaintiff was not, given full and complete credit on the contract for the amount of $500 as and for the first payment and as the contract itself recited. Such amount as such first payment, when the plaintiff purchased the contract, was deducted from the contract price of the contract. Thus, since full credit was given on the contract for the $500 payment, it is of little moment whether it was paid wholly in cash or partly in cash and partly by a note. The plaintiff in no particular repudiated the contract purchased by her, nor does she claim any breach of it on the part of the investment company, nor did she ask any relief with respect to it.

*57 Her alleged and resulting injury or damage relates wholly to the note purchased by her nearly two years after the purchase of the contract. Indisputably the purchase of the one was entirely separate from the other.

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Bluebook (online)
12 P.2d 623, 80 Utah 52, 1932 Utah LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ackerman-v-bramwell-inv-co-utah-1932.