Ball v. Warner

251 P. 929, 80 Cal. App. 427, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 44
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 1926
DocketDocket No. 4656.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 251 P. 929 (Ball v. Warner) 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
Ball v. Warner, 251 P. 929, 80 Cal. App. 427, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 44 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage on real property which was security for a promissory note.

*428 The essential facts are that on May 21, 1917, the plaintiffs sold to appellants Warner certain real and personal property for the sum of $8,000, of which amount $2,000 was paid in cash, and a part of the balance, to wit, $5,000, secured by mortgage on the land, and the remainder thereof, to wit, $1,000, by chattel mortgage on the personal property. On June 13, 1917, the appellants Warner sold said property, subject to said mortgage, to the defendant Kamphefner. On August 29, 1917, defendant George D. Kamphefner acquired all the interests in the property belonging to the other defendants Kamphefner, and on the same day, for a consideration of $5,500, resold to defendant L. L. Warner an undivided one-half interest in the property, and ever since said twenty-ninth day of August, 1917, the said Kamphefner and the said Warner have been operating all of the property together and sharing the profits therefrom.

The sum of $1,000 secured by the chattel mortgage was paid; but the sum of $5,000 secured by the mortgage on the real property, together with interest due thereon from November 21, 1920, to May 21, 1921, not having been paid, a suit to foreclose the mortgage was commenced approximately four years after the property was originally sold to defendant L. L. Warner. That part of the affirmative defense of the defendants Warner which is of material consequence on this appeal, in substance, is that in the negotiations between the plaintiffs and the defendants Warner leading up to the original sale of the land, the plaintiff George W. Ball “falsely and fraudulently told and represented to defendants Warner that there was a well on said property and that said well would produce 65 inches of water continuously for irrigating purposes, but that in truth and in fact said well never furnished over 15 inches of water, continuous pumping.”

During the course of the trial the plaintiffs filed a supplemental answer to the several affirmative defenses set up by the defendants, which answer' included allegations to the effect that by certain actions and conduct of the defendants they had waived the fraud with which the plaintiffs were charged, and that thereby and therefrom the defendants were estopped to raise the question of fraud as against the plaintiffs.

*429 On the trial of the action the plaintiffs admitted, that in no event could a deficiency judgment be rendered against any of the defendants other than defendants Warner.

In effect the c-ourt found that the material allegations of the complaint were true; that the facts sustaining defendants’ affirmative defense of fraud were true; but that because of certain acts and conduct of said defendants the said fraud of the plaintiffs was waived and defendants were thereby estopped from in any manner raising the question of fraud or misrepresentation.

From the resultant judgment the defendants Warner have appealed to this court. While many different reasons are suggested by appellants for a reversal of the judgment, each of them is dependent upon the one question of whether there was a waiver by defendants of the fraud of the plaintiffs. As is stated by appellants in their brief: “The only point, therefore, necessary to be considered on the part of the defendants Warner on this appeal is, did Warner waive the fraud? If he did waive it, then he has no right of action against the plaintiff.”

Although the evidence is somewhat conflicting, for the purpose of enabling the trial judge to determine the finding of facts tending to establish the alleged waiver, it sufficiently appears that the interest due on the note in November, 1917, was promptly paid; that when the next interest payment became due, defendant L. L. Warner requested of plaintiffs an extension of time within which to make such payment— which request was granted; that at the time when the succeeding interest payment fell due in November, 1918, defendant L. L. Warner asked of the plaintiffs that, instead of paying the interest in cash, he be permitted to make payment in straw—to which request plaintiffs acceded and credited interest as paid to the amount of $117.07—the value of the straw; and that approximately two weeks after the note for $1,000 became due, because of the fact that at that time the grain crop raised on the property had not been sold by defendants, L. L. Warner asked plaintiffs for an extension of time within which to pay said note—which request was also granted.

It also appears directly from the testimony of defendant L. L. Warner that almost immediately after the property was purchased by him from the plaintiffs he saw the defendants *430 Kamphefner unsuccessfully “trying to irrigate” a little garden by the use of the irrigating well on the property. He testified in part: “They would start the pump and it would run for a while, and the water would run about two or three hours and then stop. It would pull down to the limit of suction and quit.”

And in answer to a question as to whether any test was made prior to the fall of 1918 to find out how much water the well would furnish, defendant L. L. Warner testified: “We never made any test, but in everyday pumping it would furnish but very little water.”

The testimony given by defendant L. L. Warner further shows that he was an experienced farmer and that for two years preceding the purchase by him of the property involved herein he “had quite a little to do with water and the measurement of water as zanjero” for two different water companies.

It is thus clear that defendant L. L. Warner had actual knowledge, or at least that he was in position to acquire complete information regarding the capacity of the irrigating well in question long before any payment, whether on account of the principal or the interest on his indebtedness to the plaintiffs, became due; notwithstanding which fact he made several requests for modifications of the contract for payment of subsequent installments of principal or interest and as to each of which he was accommodated.

Although waiver is largely a question of intent, its determination must frequently rest upon deeds rather than words. In the instant case defendant L. L. Warner, being in full possession of every fact necessary to establish the misrepresentation of plaintiffs, in effect indicated that he regarded it of no material consequence. It would seem that in such circumstances, by his continuing to perform the contract at least in part for a period of over four years, he ratified it; and by his repeated requests for modifications thereof and his being accorded favors by the plaintiffs which he had no legal right to exact and to which requests plaintiffs were not bound to accede, a waiver of any claim for damages arising out of the fraud of plaintiffs necessarily followed.

While general definitions and abstract statements of the law may undoubtedly be found tending to support ap *431 pellants ’ contention that the acts and general conduct of defendant L. L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 P. 929, 80 Cal. App. 427, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-warner-calctapp-1926.