Boardman v. Crittenden

198 P. 1020, 52 Cal. App. 438, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 248
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3714.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 P. 1020 (Boardman v. Crittenden) 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
Boardman v. Crittenden, 198 P. 1020, 52 Cal. App. 438, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 248 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment against him in an action in which he sought to rescind a certain agreement entered into between him and the defendant, and to have restored to him certain instruments and to have other instruments canceled. Said instruments were delivered by plaintiff to defendant in pursuance of the terms of said agreement herein sought to be *439 rescinded. The ground relied upon for rescission of said contract is that the defendant induced the plaintiff to make the agreement in question by means of duress, menace, fraud, and undue influence. The case was tried without a jury, and the findings and judgment were in favor of defendant.

Briefly, the facts show that the plaintiff and defendant had known each other since about 1908. Plaintiff was a business man, engaged in numerous enterprises, among which was the promotion and building of gas plants on the Pacific coast. Defendant was an attorney at law, and some twenty years younger than plaintiff. During the first few years of the acquaintance, defendant was engaged to attend to a few business matters for the plaintiff, but none of these seem to have been of much importance. Mr. Board-man, the plaintiff, had many diversified business interests, and they were conducted by corporations in which the W. F. Boardman Company held large amounts of stock. Mr. Boardman was the principal stockholder in the W. F. Boardman Company. In 1911 the Boardman Company owned all the stock in the Rogue River Valley Gas Company, a corporation. The principal asset of this last-mentioned company was a gas plant near Medford, Oregon, which plant had originally been constructed by the Board-man Company. In March, 1911, Mr. Boardman proposed to Mr. Crittenden, the defendant, that a new corporation be organized and that all of the stock and bonds of the Rogue River Company be transferred to the newly organized company, which was to be known as the Oregon Gas and Electric Company. Payment was to be made to the Board-man Company in stock and bonds of the new company, and in the transaction, the value to be given to the Boardman Company in exchange for its holdings in the Rogue River Company was agreed to be $175,000. At the time Mr. Boardman submitted this proposition he made certain statements to Mr. Crittenden regarding the character of the gas plant, its manner of construction, its actual cost, operating facilities, and future earning power. The particular representation out of which the real controversy arose was that the plant had been constructed by the Boardman Company at an actual cost of $126,000, without any commissions, discounts, or engineering fees of any kind, and *440 that all the materials used in the construction of said plant had been estimated at actual cost to the Boardman Company, which was in a position to secure such materials at a lower figure than contractors generally.

According to the findings, Mr. Boardman stated that because no engineering fees or commissions or expenses of supervision, etc., had been included in the estimated cost of the plant, the Boardman Company should receive a $50,000 profit on the construction of the plant, and its selling price to the new company should be fixed, therefore, at- $175,000.

It was also represented to Mr. Crittenden that it was necessary to procure a certain amount of capital for operating expenses and future extensions of the plant, and it was suggested that Mr. Crittenden invest in the securities of the new company. The new company was organized, Mr. Crittenden attending to the legal details, and, thereafter, in reliance upon Mr. Boardman’s representations as to the construction cost of the plant, Mr. Crittenden invested about $50,000 in the bonds of the Oregon Gas and Electric Company. These bonds, of the par value of $1,000, were sold at $900, and there was a certain amount of stock given as a bonus with the bonds. Later, by reason of assessments levied upon the stock, Mr. Crittenden’s investment was increased until it was something over $67,000.

From the time of the formation of the Oregon Gas and Electric Company, in 1911, until the execution of the contract out of which this action arose (January 16, 1916), Mr. Crittenden was the secretary of the said company and was its attorney. He was also the attorney, in various matters, for other corporations in which either Mr. Board-man or the Boardman Company held controlling interests, and in some matters, during that period of time, he represented Mr. Boardman personally. The testimony and the correspondence between the parties show that a close business and social relation came to exist between them. Mr. Crittenden testified that it was not until some time in December, 1915, that he came to understand fully that Mr. Boardman had misrepresented to him the cost of the gas plant, which, at the trial of this action, he claimed was something between $67,000 and $80,000. At the time he *441 realized that misrepresentations had been made to him, he was representing the Boardman Company as its attorney in . certain action then pending in the supreme court oí this state, entitled Boardman v. Petch, and in that ease, the question of the actual cost of this gas plant was one of the subjects of inquiry. It appears that it was through his examination of the documents and files in this case against Petch, and through his conversations with the defendant Petch, that he became aware of the alleged misrepresentations. Upon this discovery, he determined to bring an action against Mr. Boardman for damages sustained by reason of the false representations, and also to bring suits for accounting and for other relief, the details of which are immaterial here.

On Saturday, January 15, 1916,' Mr. Crittenden telephoned Mr. Boardman, who was then in Los Angeles. He told Mr. Boardman that he desired to discuss some business matters with him and that he would come to Los Angeles for that purpose. Mr. Boardman stated that he was leaving that night for his home in Berkeley, and it was agreed that a meeting should be had on Sunday morning, at Mr. Boardman’s office in San Francisco. Mr. Boardman went to his office to keep the appointment, but upon discovering that he had forgotten his keys, telephoned to Mr. Crittenden and arranged to come to Crittenden’s office. Upon his arrival there Crittenden immediately, according to the testimony of both parties, stated, in effect, that all business and social relations between them were at an end; that he, Crittenden, was through with Boardman, and intended to act only for himself and protect himself; that he would deal with Mr. Boardman not as his attorney, but as a co-investor in Oregon Gas and Electric Company. The negotiations between the parties continued all day and late into the evening and were finally consummated upon the following morning by the execution of the contract and delivery of the instruments. now sought to be avoided.

There is a sharp conflict in the testimony as to the details of the interview and negotiations culminating in the contract. Mr. Crittenden and his associate, Mr. Nunlist, who was later called into the conference, and other witnesses testified in a manner which amply supports the *442 findings. It is true the testimony of Mr. Boardman and his business associate, Mr.

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

Related

Lee v. Gump
58 P.2d 941 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
Bonelli v. Conrad
37 P.2d 137 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)
Brown v. Canadian Indus. Alcohol Co.
289 P. 613 (California Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 P. 1020, 52 Cal. App. 438, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boardman-v-crittenden-calctapp-1921.