Bancroft v. Woodward

190 P. 445, 183 Cal. 99, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 378
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 5309.
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 190 P. 445 (Bancroft v. Woodward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bancroft v. Woodward, 190 P. 445, 183 Cal. 99, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 378 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

*101 OLNEY, J.

The plaintiffs brought an action to recover . certain installments of rent due them from the defendant according to the terms of a lease between the parties. The defendant answered, denying certain of the allegations of the complaint and, in addition, alleging that he had been induced to execute the lease through a certain fraudulent misrepresentation by one of the plaintiffs. He also, in his answer, set up by way of counterclaim the same fraud and his damage thereby in a very considerable amount. He also filed at the same time a cross-complaint in which he sought a rescission of the lease by reason of the same fraud. The plaintiffs answered the cross-complaint and upon the issues presented by it and the answer to it, the cause went to trial, a trial of the issues presented by the original complaint and the defendant’s answer being postponed. The trial resulted in a judgment for the defendant declaring the lease rescinded, and the plaintiffs appeal.

It is well, before proceeding with a further statement of the facts, to dispose of a contention of the appellants based on the facts already stated. It is urged on their behalf that a person induced by fraud to enter into a contract has his option, upon the discovery of the fraud, either to allow the contract to stand and obtain relief in damages for the wrong inflicted upon him, or to disaffirm the contract and obtain what relief is necessary to restore him to his original position, but that he cannot both recover damages and be restored to statu quo; that the right of a party defrauded to disaffirm the contract and be restored to his original position is one which must be affirmatively exercised and consistently maintained, and which is lost if he takes a position inconsistent with it, as where he brings an action for damages. From these propositions as a premise, the conclusion is argued that the defendant here cannot at the same time seek the relief of damages by way of counterclaim and claim rescission by way of his cross-complaint, and that because he does ask for damages he cannot have rescission.

[1] We may grant the premise, but the conclusion does not follow. While it is true that a party induced to enter into a transaction by fraud, affirms the transaction when he brings an action for damages and because of the affirmance loses any right to disaffirm subsequently (Stuart v. *102 Hayden, 169 U. S. 1, [42 L. Ed. 639, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 274, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]), it is not true that if he seeks to disaffirm, but ineffectually, he loses the right thereafter to maintain an action for damages. The right' to damages exists unless and until the transaction is effectually dis¡affirmed. It could hardly be questioned, for example, that under a complaint which, by proper and sufficient averments set out that the plaintiff had been induced by fraud to enter into a contract and had endeavored to rescind it because of such fraud, and prayed relief upon the basis of a rescission, the plaintiff might be accorded damages in case the fraud were found but under such circumstances that the right of rescission did not exist. To put the matter in another way, it is wholly inconsistent for a party defrauded to ask for damages first and a rescission if he cannot have them. [2] But there is nothing inconsistent in his asking for rescission first and damages if he cannot have it. The defendant here by his counterclaim and cross-complaint filed at the same time has gone no further than to say that he is entitled either to damages or to rescission, and that if he cannot have the latter he asks the former. There is nothing in this .that constitutes an affirmance so that his right to rescission is gone. Upon this point the case comes directly within the rulings of Glover v. Radford, 120 Mich. 542, [79 N. W. 803], and Richardson v. Lowe, 149 Fed. 625, [79 C. C. A. 317].

Passing now to the further facts, much of what we are about to state is not in dispute. As to some of the facts, however, this is not- true, and wherever it is not we have taken either the facts as found by the court or the defendant’s own testimony upon which his case almost entirely depends. It appears that the plaintiffs were and are the owners, of an entire block in the business district of San Diego, which, on October 7, 1912, they leased as a whole to the defendant for a period of ninety-nine years, commencing the 1st of the following January, 1913. It is this lease for whose rentals the plaintiffs sued and whose rescission is sought by the defendant. The block was occupied by a number of different buildings leased, in whole or in part, to various tenants for various periods. The lease to the defendant, which we may call the ground lease, provided that it was subject to existing leases and that the *103 lessee should have the rents accruing from them after the commencement of his term and should himself have the right to make leases. The negotiations for the lease were carried on by the defendant mainly with one of the plaintiffs, and during the negotiations this plaintiff handed the defendant a bundle of papers and told him that it contained all of the outstanding leases when, in fact, it did not contain one to a Mrs. Kinney, of which the defendant remained ignorant until after he had taken possession under his lease. The Kinney lease was of the upper floor of a two-story building occupying one-eighth of the block at the northwest corner. The floor leased was used as a rooming-house. Mrs. Kinney was in possession at the time but under another lease*, of which the defendant was informed and which expired December 31, 1913. The lease complained of was an extension of this at an increased rental for three years, expiring December 31, 1916. Complaint is not made by the defendant as to the rental called for by the latter lease, but solely as to the length of its term. The lease to the defendant contemplated, and, in fact required, that the defendant erect new buildings on the property, and this was a feature of the negotiations between him and the plaintiffs. His complaint is that because of the length of the term of the Kinney lease, negotiations which he had under way for financing the improving of the 'property failed and he was unable to improve it as he desired.

The defendant’s agent discovered the existence of the second Kinney lease almost immediately on taking charge of the property, and the defendant himself learned of it by the 1st of the following April, three months after the commencement of his term. He immediately complained to the plaintiff who had made the representation as to existing leases, who stated that he had forgotten about the extension, and would do all he could to get Mrs. Kinney out by the end of 1913, when the defendant had expected to be free to take possession. Nothing more occurred concerning the matter until some months later, and still in 1913, the defendant spoke to the plaintiff again about it. The plaintiff then told him that the lease to Mrs. Kinney was good and he was unable to put her out, and expressed regret and assured the defendant he would do all he could *104

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 P. 445, 183 Cal. 99, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bancroft-v-woodward-cal-1920.