Bacon v. Soule

126 P. 384, 19 Cal. App. 428, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 13
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 12, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 1001.
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 126 P. 384 (Bacon v. Soule) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bacon v. Soule, 126 P. 384, 19 Cal. App. 428, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 13 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered upon an order sustaining defendants’ demurrer to plaintiff’s fourth amended complaint without leave to further amend.

The cause of action stated in plaintiff’s complaint sounds in damages for fraud -and deceit alleged to have been practiced upon plaintiff by the defendants in the negotiation and consummation of an agreement whereby certain real property of the Bacon Land and Loan Company, Inc., was transferred to the plaintiff in lieu of his stock and interest in the corporation.

The salient features of the transaction out of which the controversy arose and upon which the plaintiff’s cause of action purports to be founded are stated in the complaint to be these:

The plaintiff, Frank P. Bacon, is a brother of the defendants, Ella Etta B. Soule and Carrie J. Bacon. They, the plaintiff and defendants, were the owners in equal shares of the entire-corporate capital stock of the Bacon Land and Loan Company, and at one time all three were directors and officers of the corporation. In the year 1895 the plaintiff resigned as the president and as a director of the corporation. The defendants, however, continued to be officers and directors of the corporation until it was dissolved in the year 1905. The dissolution of the corporation was brought about by the dissensions and disagreements and the constantly conflicting views and opinions of the plaintiff and defendants as to the proper management of the corporation, and from this resulted the agreement, which is the basis of this action, wherein the properties of the corporation were partitioned and transferred to the plaintiff and the defendants in lieu of the surrender *432 and cancellation of their respective stockholdings in the corporation.

This agreement was entered into and completely executed in the year 1905, whereupon the corporation was dissolved. Pursuant to the agreement, plaintiff selected and received, as a portion of his share of the assets of the corporation, a certain lot of land with a dwelling-house thereon at the agreed valuation of $30,000. When plaintiff had last seen and examined the dwelling-house, some two years before, it contained fixtures and furnishings valued at $2,000, which he believed were still in place at the time he selected the property in question as a portion of his share of the corporation assets. The fixtures and furnishings, however, had been sold by the corporation and removed from the house by the purchaser some time prior to the consummation of the agreement between plaintiff and the defendants. This fact was not disclosed to the plaintiff by the defendants during the negotiations for the division and distribution of the corporation assets, and it was not discovered by plaintiff until three months later, and after he had accepted and received the property in question without having seen or examined the house or its contents for a period of two years.

The plaintiff, in negotiating with the defendants, “supposed and believed” that the house was fitted and furnished as when he last saw it, and in accepting the property without personal or any investigation of its condition and contents, he relied “upon the honesty and integrity of his sisters and upon their natural love and affection” for him, never believing that they, “his nearest blood relatives, would defraud or impose upon him or in any way deceive him or conceal from him any fact relating to their dealings with each other. ’

The defendants, however, “allowed the plaintiff to accept the property” without disclosing to him that the fixtures and furnishings had been previously sold and removed, notwithstanding the fact that they knew that the plaintiff, when he agreed to accept the property at a valuation of $30,000, was acting under the “inducement and belief” that the house was in the samé condition as to fixtures and furnishings as it was some twó years before. It does not appear, however, that the defendants, either by words or artifice calculated to deceive, induced the belief in plaintiff that the property in question *433 .was in the same condition as when he last saw it, and it is not claimed or alleged that the defendants knew or had any reason, aside from their blood relationship, to suppose that the plaintiff was placing any trust or confidence in them in connection with this particular transaction.

Plaintiff’s complaint, in part, proceeds also upon the theory that because the plaintiff and defendants were stockholders in the corporation, they were business partners in the ordinary sense, and in that behalf, the complaint alleges that the plaintiff was induced to accept the property in question without an investigation as to its condition or its fixtures or furnishings because of “his confidence in the defendants as his partners in the joint ownership of the large properties involved, amounting to several hundred thousand dollars.”

It is further alleged that if the fixtures and furnishings of the house had not been removed, the rental value of the house would have been $50 per month, but because of their removal, the house could not be rented and remained vacant for a period of eighteen months. Although the plaintiff had agreed to take the property in question at the valuation of $30,000, its actual market value at the time of its transfer to him was not more than $20,712, because of the removal of the fixtures and the consequent damage to the house. By reason of all this, the complaint alleges that the plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $10,188.

From the foregoing statement of the essential facts upon which the plaintiff’s cause of action is founded, it is evident that damages are sought primarily upon the theory that a confidential or fiduciary relation existed between the plaintiff and the defendants because of their blood relationship, and because of the further fact that the defendants were officers and directors of a corporation in which the plaintiff was a stockholder, and that therefore the allegations of the complaint prima facie imposed a legal obligation upon the defendants to voluntarily disclose to the plaintiff the exact status of the corporation’s assets before he had selected and received his share of the same.

It is conceded that the complaint does not state a cause of action if the pleaded facts do not show actual fraud or do not actually, or as a matter of law, show the existence of a confi *434 dential or fiduciary relation between the parties with reference to the transaction out of which the controversy arose.

The law relating to the subject of confidential relations has been so often declared and is generally so well understood that a mere reference to its underlying principles will suffice for the discussion -and decision of the paramount point presented upon this appeal. A “confidential relation” in law may be defined to be any relation existing between parties to a transaction wherein one of the parties is in duty bound to act with the utmost good faith for the benefit of the other party.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P. 384, 19 Cal. App. 428, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bacon-v-soule-calctapp-1912.