Cameron v. Edgemont Investment Co.

299 P. 698, 136 Or. 385, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 129
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 299 P. 698 (Cameron v. Edgemont Investment Co.) 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
Cameron v. Edgemont Investment Co., 299 P. 698, 136 Or. 385, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 129 (Or. 1931).

Opinion

*388 ROSSMAN, J.

The following facts seem to be free from contradiction. The defendant is the owner of a residential subdivision of the city of Portland, entitled Terwilliger heights, which it was proceeding to- sell through the agency of one N. B. Clarke. The latter established upon the tract a building which the plaintiff described as an “entertainment house,” where, according to her testimony, a Mr. Hinkey lectured “about real estate values in Portland, and the great possibility of advance in price, and especially in that district where they were offering these lots for sale. ’ ’ Incidental to the lecture a lunch was served. The plaintiff, who was a teacher in Commerce High School of Portland, and who daily passed this property in going to and from her place of employment, received an • invitation to attend the lecture. After she had accepted it a salesman named Farmer called at her school and conveyed her to Terwilliger heights in an automobile. We have already quoted in full her description of the lecture. Apparently at its conclusion, or during the course of her next visit to the property, she selected the lot described in her contract of pur *389 chase and a few days later, when Farmer called upon her, attached her signature to the contract. We now revert to the portion of her testimony where she related the representations which she claimed induced her purchase. She testified:

“He told me that if I would go into this, that I would make five hundred dollars. I explained to him that I didn’t have money enough to pay two thousand dollars, or $1,975 I think it was, so he said that I wouldn’t have to pay that, I would pay a certain amount of payments, he didn’t say definitely how many, and then the lot would be resold and I would make my profit, five hundred dollars.
“Q.' You say he said he would make a profit of five hundred dollars on it for you?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did he say anything about a sale of this property?
“A. Yes. He said that that would happen within a certain length of time, he couldn’t assure me just exactly how long, but I asked him about taxes and he said that I would never have to pay any taxes, the property would be sold before that time.
“Q. Well, what did he say about the resale of it?
“A. He said that after a certain time they would resell it, but they couldn’t very well resell my lot at a higher price, when the lot next door hadn’t gone up. For instance, my lot was $1,975, and if you are going to sell it for $2,475, you couldn’t ask that for the lot next door to it when it hadn’t sold for the higher price. He said they were selling in Burlingame, and after they were through there they would come back and resell on Terwilliger.
“Q. Was that the time that they were to resell your lot?
“A. Well, he didn’t make any definite time. He said afterwards they would come back and they would sell my lot as soon as they possibly could. * * *
“A. He said I would have to make some payments, just a few payments, and then I would have the lot *390 sold for me. He assured me that I would not have to pay very much, because I explained to him that I wasn’t in any position to go into anything to that extent, and he knew it, because he knew that I didn’t have the money. * *
“A. He said ‘Miss Cameron, I will agree that I will make five hundred dollars for you on this lot.’ I said, ‘Well, I am not in a position — ’ those were my exact words, ‘I am not in a position to go into this to this extent, ’ and he answered me and said, ‘ That is all right, you don’t need to pay that much money, because your lot will be sold before that time, in a short time. ’ Those were his exact words, as far as I can say. * * *
“A. Yes; he said that he would resell, but that he couldn’t resell my lot for an advanced price when the other lots hadn’t gone up. It wouldn’t look reasonable to the first buyers of these other lots, you see. However, he told me that a lot, two lots away from mine, had already been resold.”

She also testified that Farmer told her that the price of this lot would be advanced to $2,375 the next week, that before October 1 a sewer would be installed, and a pavement would be laid. Likewise she swore that Farmer stated that ‘ ‘ a number of houses would be put up there by spring.” The plaintiff apparently made no effort to show that these four promises and prophecies had not been fulfilled beyond testifying that no more than two or three new houses had been erected since her purchase of this lot. Plaintiff’s brief does not contend that the proof rendered these four representations actionable, and since the evidence entirely fails to disclose that either Farmer, Clarke, or the defendant knew the former’s statements were false, when made, we shall disregard them and confine our efforts to the contention that the unperformed promise of resale is sufficient to substantiate the circuit court’s decree.

*391 There is no evidence whatever in the record that Farmer and Clarke did not honestly intend to keep the promise of resale. The defendant, however, frankly concedes that it never intended to resell the property and fortifies its statement with testimony that it never authorized Clarke, or any of his salesmen, to promise resales; in fact, its secretary testified that the moment when it received an intimation that Clarke’s salesmen were promising resales it required him to have them desist therefrom. In Sharkey v. Burlingame Co., 131 Or. 185 (282 P. 546), wherein a promise of resale, made under circumstances somewhat similar to those now before us was alleged to have constituted the instrumentality of deceit, we pointed out that authority to make such promise was outside of both the actual and apparent scope of the agent’s authority. But we" held that a rescission in favor of the purchaser and against the principal was justified when the evidence showed that although the principal was innocent at the outset he nevertheless received the benefit of the agent’s fraudulent conduct and retained it after he had acquired knowledge of the manner in which the advantage had been obtained. That case also employed the principle that when the evidence proved that a promise, which the responsible party never intended to perform, was the deceptive factor which misled the complaining party, such false promise was capable of supporting a decree of rescission. These same principles of law were again employed in Boyer v. Edgemont Investment Co., 135 Or. 161 (295 P. 471).

But if the promise of resale was made on behalf of the agent only, and was so understood by the plaintiff, then the latter is confronted with a record, made *392 almost entirely by herself, which fails to show that the promissor did not intend to keep his promise. The plaintiff testified that both Farmer and the only other salesman in Clarke’s employ to whom she spoke, one Gr. J.

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Bluebook (online)
299 P. 698, 136 Or. 385, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-edgemont-investment-co-or-1931.