Baker v. Van Dolzer

298 P.2d 86, 142 Cal. App. 2d 428, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1999
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 1956
DocketCiv. 8745
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 298 P.2d 86 (Baker v. Van Dolzer) 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
Baker v. Van Dolzer, 298 P.2d 86, 142 Cal. App. 2d 428, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1999 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

PEEK, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs and cross-defendants from a judgment in favor of the defendants and cross-complainants in an action to quiet title to certain real property situated in Sonoma County. At the conclusion of the trial before the court, judgment was entered in favor of the defendants in the sum of $3,178.24, being the amount of their payments under the contract. The judgment further ordered that a lien be imposed upon the real property as security for the payment of the judgment, and that upon the judgment being duly satisfied the plaintiffs’ title be quieted *430 as against defendants. The plaintiffs now appeal contending first, that the evidence was insufficient to support the findings and judgment; second, that there was no rescission as a matter of law; third, that the agreement for the sale of the real property was forfeited by defendants at the time of the alleged rescission; and fourth, that the court erred in allowing defendants to file their second amended cross-complaint to conform to proof. It is our conclusion that none of such contentions warrants interference with the judgment of the trial court. It is our further conclusion that, except as to such deletions, additions or modifications as are necessary for a determination of the questions raised on appeal, the opinion of the trial court correctly treats and disposes of all issues involved. It is therefore adopted as the opinion of this court and is as follows:

“Plaintiff Alice M. Baker commenced this action against defendants as a simple suit to quiet title. Defendant filed an answer joining issue on all the allegations of the complaint wherein said plaintiff claimed title to the real property described in the complaint. Defendants also filed an amended cross-complaint charging A. W. Baker with fraud in connection with the sale of said property by him to cross-complainants under a written agreement for sale of real estate between A. W. Baker and cross-complainants, executed by the parties and bearing a date of April 12, 1947. The allegations of fraud particularly stressed at the trial were those concerning misrepresentation of the water supply and of the condition of the dwelling house on the premises.
“Both cross-defendants, describing themselves as plaintiffs and cross-defendants, answered the amended cross-complaint admitting the allegations thereof to the effect that A. W. Baker was acting individually and as the authorized agent of Alice M. Baker, his wife, and the allegations of the cross-complaint respecting the amounts which had been paid by cross-complainants on account of the contract as well as the dates of payments. All the allegations of fraud were denied.
“The evidence disclosed that A. W. Baker had, without a valuable consideration, conveyed the premises to Alice M. Baker, his wife, by deed executed and acknowledged one day prior to the verification of the complaint and recorded five days after the filing of the complaint.
“Both cross-complainants testified unequivocally that *431 prior to signing any writing in connection with their purchase or making any deposit, A. W. Baker stated and represented to them that the well on the property was a good one and that there was plenty of water; that after their making a deposit of $500 and signing a memorandum of agreement on the morning of April 12, 1947, to purchase the property for $9600, payable in installments with interest as provided therein (cross-complainants Exhibit “A”), Baker came to the premises on the afternoon of said date and stated that he had forgotten to tell them that the well was on adjoining property and that three contiguous neighbors, including the occupants of the premises in question, all used the water but there was plenty for all, at which time they inquired more particularly as to the supply and he replied that there was plenty for all the users and enough to give away, whereupon Baker added, in pencil, to the memorandum of agreement the words ‘ Community all use water all pay upkeep. ’ Cross-complainants testified that they believed said representations and relied upon them in making the purchase and would not have purchased had they not so believed and had they known that the water supply was insufficient.
“Baker admitted that he had represented that the well was a good one and that there was plenty of water. Later on in his testimony he qualified this to some extent by asserting that he had told them there was plenty of water ‘except for irrigation.’
“The evidence in support of the allegations of the cross-complaint with respect to fraud concerning the water supply is clear and convincing and preponderates strongly in favor of cross-complainants. Defendants testified that the well went dry and the pump commenced to suck air about July or August, 1947, and thereafter until the rains commenced in the fall there was an insuffiicent amount of water for the household even with the utmost care and economy in conserving its use and none whatever for the other normal purposes of the 3-acre tract, notwithstanding one of the neighboring users had drilled a new well and was making no draft upon the system connected to the property in question. The testimony of Baker to the effect that he had always had plenty of water and no trouble at all with the water supply was substantially overcome and discredited, not only by the overwhelming testimony concerning a shortage of water in the system in the summer season both before and after 1947, but also by the very clear and convincing testimony of the *432 witness Dorothy C. Simpson, a school teacher having no interest in the outcome of this litigation, residing on adjoining property, who had in 1944 and prior thereto been a tenant on the 14 acres owned by Baker since approximately 1943 and subdivided by him, of which the three acres in question is one of three parcels all served by said water system at the time of the sale to cross-complainants. Mrs. Simpson testified that she lived on the Imelde property (14 acres) for a couple of years prior to early 1944; that she had occupied the only dwelling house then on the premises; that in November, 1943, Baker came to her and announced that he had bought the property; that she had several conversations with Baker concerning the water supply; that about two weeks after Thanksgiving 1943, in the tank house on the premises, Baker had asked her how good the water supply was, and that she had told him they had had trouble early that summer in that it had taken from two and one-half to three months to fill the tank by steady pumping, and the supply was so low that the pump sucked air, and that on a later occasion, near a Wagner apple tree on the premises, she had told Mrs. Baker that the water supply was not good for a place of that size and that they had had to watch it and pump carefully. It was established that at the time of said conversations there was only one dwelling house on the entire 14 acres; that there was only one kitchen faucet and no bathroom or toilet in the house, and no lawn or garden for lack of water.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rieger v. Rich
329 P.2d 770 (California Court of Appeal, 1958)
Pattyn v. Favers
327 P.2d 818 (Montana Supreme Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 P.2d 86, 142 Cal. App. 2d 428, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-van-dolzer-calctapp-1956.