Carr v. Tatum

24 P.2d 195, 133 Cal. App. 274, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 512
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 14, 1933
DocketDocket No. 7698.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 24 P.2d 195 (Carr v. Tatum) 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
Carr v. Tatum, 24 P.2d 195, 133 Cal. App. 274, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 512 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

Plaintiffs were the owners of certain real property. Defendants Tatum and LaGasse were agents who represented plaintiffs in the sale of the property to a man named Hess. In order to assist Hess in his plans to improve the property, in consideration for their deed therefor to Hess, instead of receiving cash or its equivalent, at the suggestion and solicitation of defendants Tatum and LaGasse, plaintiffs received from Hess a promissory note secured by a deed of trust of the property, which was made subject to each of two prior mortgages with which Hess had encumbered the property in order to obtain funds with which to make the proposed improvements thereon. Thereafter, on the failure of Hess to pay the indebtedness secured by one of such prior mortgages, as the result of a sale on the execution of a judgment recovered in a suit to foreclose such mortgage, the plaintiffs lost the amount of money represented by the value of the property formerly owned by them and which, as hereinbefore set forth, had been conveyed by them to Hess. Thereupon plaintiffs commenced the instant action against defendants Tatum and LaGasse to recover from them a judgment for the damages suffered by plaintiffs in the transaction. In form, the action was for fraud and deceit alleged to have been practiced by defendants upon plaintiffs in inducing them to sell the property to Hess on the terms hereinbefore indicated. According to the allegations of the amended complaint filed by plaintiffs, in substance the fraudulent conduct of defendants consisted in the making of intentionally false oral representations by them to plaintiffs concerning the financial *276 responsibility of Hess. In particular, by the amended complaint it was alleged that, “with intent to cheat and defraud plaintiffs”, the defendants made the 'following representations to plaintiffs:

“(a) That the said William B. Hess was a responsible business man;
“(b) That the said C. C. C. Tatum and Simon LaGasse had ‘looked up’ Mr. Hess and had found that he was rated ‘ A—1 ’;
“(c) That defendants’ investigation showed that said William B. Hess was a very responsible New York business man;
“(d) That said William B. Hess was then building a large apartment house here in Los Angeles, which said apartment house was to be erected in accordance with a sketch then and there shown to plaintiffs;
“(e) That said Simon LaGasse stated that C. C. C. Tatum was a reliable and honest person and that said C. C. C. Tatum would not stand for any ‘crooked work’;
“(f) That said Simon LaGasse further stated that said William B. Hess was ‘financially responsible’, and was a man with plenty of money;
“(g) That said C. C. C. Tatum was a responsible person, and that said defendants would not let plaintiffs lose money in the deal; that said defendants would protect plaintiffs against loss;
“ (h) That certain property located in Madera county, California, and owned by the said William B. Hess, had, been investigated by defendants and found to be owned by Hess, and worth twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000.00);
“ (i) That said defendants stated to plaintiffs as follows: ‘That we would not take you into this deal, if we did not know what we were doing’.”

To the amended complaint defendants demurred both generally and specifically; which demurrer was by the trial court sustained, with plaintiffs “given ten days to amend”. On the failure of plaintiffs to amend their amended complaint, a judgment of dismissal of the action was entered. It is from such judgment that the instant appeal is prosecuted.

Although certain minor questions of law are raised by the parties to the appeal, it is largely, if not entirely, upon *277 the construction which should be placed upon the provisions of section 1974 of the Code of Civil Procedure that the rights of the'respective litigants herein depend. That statute is as follows: “No evidence is admissible to charge a person upon a representation as to the credit of a third person, unless such representation, or some memorandum thereof, be in writing, and either subscribed by or in the handwriting of the party to be charged.”

The contention by defendants on the hearing of the demurrer to the amended complaint,, and as maintained by them as respondents herein, was and is respectively that the provisions of the statute are applicable to the alleged representation made to plaintiffs as hereinbefore set forth, and consequently that the amended complaint failed to state a cause of action against defendants. With reference to that situation, on behalf of appellants the point is met with the implied admission and assertion respectively that “the authorities are quite well settled that where the representation is strictly as to credit of a third person and no other considerations are involved the statute applies, and the representations must be in writing.- The difficulty comes, however, when we consider the relationship existing between the person making the representation and the person. to whom representations are made”.

In such circumstances, this court is relieved from the necessity of establishing the applicability of the provisions of the statute to a general situation wherein it ap'pears that the representations of which complaint is made concededly embrace facts “as to the credit of a third person”. Nor does this court experience any hesitation in declaring that, as tested by-the allegations of the amended complaint and weighed by the authorities, the representations in question fall squarely within the requisite precedent conditions demanded by the terms of the statute for its operation. That statements made by one person to- a second individual to the effect that a third person with whom the second individual was negotiating with reference to a business transaction was “a responsible business man”; that the first person had “looked up” the third person and found that “he was rated A-l”; that the third person “was a very responsible New York business man”; that he was “financially responsible and was a man with plenty of money”;— *278 constituted representations “as to the credit” of such third person, is so clear that it would seem a useless task to attempt to establish the correctness of such a conclusion (Nevada Bank v. Portland Nat. Bank, 59 Fed. 338; Cook v. Churchman, 104 Ind. 141 [3 N. E. 759]); and that the remaining allegations of the complaint regarding business activities of such “third person” in the matter of the contemplated construction by him of “a large apartment house”, together with his ownership of “certain property . . . worth $25,000”,—also constituted representations “as to the credit of a third person”, is attested by the language that occurs in the opinion in the ease of McKee v. Rudd, 222 Mo. 344 [121 S. W. 312, 319, 133 Am. St. Rep. 529], It is there said that:

“Massachusetts has a similar statute, and in Hunnewell v. Duxbury, 157 Mass., loc. cit. 6 [31 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
24 P.2d 195, 133 Cal. App. 274, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-tatum-calctapp-1933.