Brown Et Ux v. Hassenstab Et Ux

319 P.2d 929, 212 Or. 246, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 220
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 319 P.2d 929 (Brown Et Ux v. Hassenstab Et Ux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown Et Ux v. Hassenstab Et Ux, 319 P.2d 929, 212 Or. 246, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 220 (Or. 1957).

Opinion

*248 ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs, husband and wife, from a decree of the circuit court which dismissed their suit for the rescission of a contract of sale whereby they undertook the purchase from the defendants, husband and wife, of diverse items of property such as a lease upon a building and various articles upon the leased premises that constituted the equipment of a going motion picture theater and the furnishings of eleven apartments in Salem. The challenged decree barred the plaintiffs from claiming any right, title or interest in any of the property. The complaint sought the desired relief upon charges of false representations.

July 16,1952, Joseph Hassenstab, one of the two defendants, listed a motion picture theater, of which he and his wife were the owners, with Stanley Zeeb, a real estate agent. The business name, equipment and the lease of the building which, besides the theater, housed the aforementioned eleven apartments and two stores, were offered for sale. Those items, after the plaintiffs had contracted to purchase them, became the subject matter of this suit. Hassenstab told Zeeb that the business grossed about $4,000 per month and that the expenses, roughly estimated, were about $1,200 per month. Zeeb placed the following advertisement in a newspaper:

“If you are interested in a good theater that shows about $20,000 per year net income and can be purchased on E. Z. terms, call for appointment.”

Mr. and Mrs. Hassenstab had knowledge of the contents of the advertisement. Michael Brown, one of the two plaintiffs, was attracted by the advertisement and called upon Zeeb who told him that from his information the business did about $20,000 per year net, *249 and that any further information would have to come from Hassenstab. Brown swore that upon being introduced to Hassenstab he asked the latter whether the business really netted $20,000 and that Hassenstab said that it did. Hassenstab testified that he represented the business as netting between $15,000 and $20,000.

Zeeb testified that Hassenstab told Brown that the income included everything but the rentals, and that an additional sum of $6,000 was mentioned. Zeeb said, “I mean it was just that that particular amount was plus whatever had been reported to the buyer.” Zeeb then told Brown that, in addition to the $2,000, that had been reported, the Hassenstabs had not taken into consideration payments of $500 per month which they had been making on a mortgage. According to Brown, he asked Hassenstab on two occasions, once on September 24, 1952 before signing the contract, and again in December, 1952 whether the business had netted $26,000 and that Hassenstab replied in the affirmative.

The earnest money receipt provided that “Purchasers to look at books and approve them by August 23, 1952.” On the evening of August 22, 1952, the Browns went to the theater to examine the books. Mrs. Hassenstab, who did the bookkeeping, had prepared a typewritten statement of receipts and expenses from her day book, payroll books and rental records. According to her, the statement which she had prepared was a more convenient source of the truth than the set of books. And, indeed, it was. The most important book was the day book. The left-hand page was similar to a cash receipts journal, with individual entries for each day of the year, of the cash received from the sale of candy, popcorn and Coca Cola, the receipts from *250 the box office, the admissions tax and a total of the box office receipts plus admissions tax. The right-hand page was similar to a cash disbursements journal. There were no subtotals or totals. The books were displayed at that time, but it was the typewritten statement prepared by Mrs. Hassenstab that received attention. The books, lacking as they were in totals and other entries, were of little help to one who sought information.

The statement prepared by Mrs. Hassenstab was a total of the figures just mentioned, or an average monthly total which took into consideration the rentals and the payroll. The statement remained in the possession of the Hassenstabs and has not been produced. Mr. Brown testified that the statement represented the average monthly box office “take” to be $3,700 and the expenses as about $1,200. Mrs. Brown said it represented the box office receipts at $37,000. The Hassenstabs, who had prepared the statement, could not remember any of the figures. Mr. Brown testified : “At that time we had no reason to question it. We accepted it as a true picture of their books.” According to him, he “looked at the gross, added up the figures of overhead expenses and subtracted it from the gross and the amount was approximately the same as represented this $26,000.”

We will attempt an explanation of the statement which was prepared by Mrs. Hassenstab consistent with the good faith of all the parties. She was asked:

“Q Was the total gross on the Hollywood Theater at any time in the two years prior to October 1, 1952, $48,000.00 on the theater alone, $48,000.00 a year?
“A Our computation was on the year 1951 at the time I gave the figures; in the latter half of $40,000. It was between 45 and 48.”

*251 In that year the receipts from the theater were, according to the income tax statement of the Hassenstabs, $41,513.95 (box office, $32,643.93 plus film advertisement, $798 and concessions, $8,072.02). Including rents, the Hassenstabs showed gross receipts of $45,831.95 in their income tax statement for 1951. Mrs. Hassenstab called the amount indicated in the tax schedule the “net gross.” “The total gross”, she said, “would be in the vicinity of $51,000 or $52,000. The gross includes the admission tax. They call it net gross when they take that in.”

If we assume that Mrs. Hassenstab included the amount of the federal admissions tax in her estimate of the gross receipts of the theater, the gross receipts would have been about $47,000. It will be noticed that that figure is consistent with her statement that the gross receipts from the theater were between $45,000 and $48,000. Assuming that was the yearly figure, the monthly average would have been about $3,900. This figure will be noticed to be consistent with Mr. Hassenstab’s opinion that the business grossed about $4,000 a month.

Mrs. Hassenstab said that the statement which she prepared for the Browns showed “all running expenses, segregated, and all income, segregated.” She declared that “running expenses” were regular expenses necessary to operate a theater “such as utilities, film rentals, advertising, rent, sound service, salaries and film deliveries.” Mrs. Hassenstab thought the theater alone had netted about $15,000 in 1951, and explained that she had arrived at that figure by deducting the “running expenses” from the “total income” of the theater for the year 1951.

We have estimated that what Mrs. Hassenstab treated as “running expenses” amounted to about *252 $29,000 in 1951. If the Browns and the Hassenstabs estimated the net profit by deducting the “running expenses” from the “total gross,” they would have arrived at a net profit from the theater of about $18,000.

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Bluebook (online)
319 P.2d 929, 212 Or. 246, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-et-ux-v-hassenstab-et-ux-or-1957.