Carroll v. Dungey

223 Cal. App. 2d 247, 35 Cal. Rptr. 681, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 1523
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1963
DocketCiv. 10642
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 223 Cal. App. 2d 247 (Carroll v. Dungey) 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
Carroll v. Dungey, 223 Cal. App. 2d 247, 35 Cal. Rptr. 681, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 1523 (Cal. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, J.

George E. Carroll and his wife, Anne D. Carroll, brought this action against H. H. Chapman and Katherine Chapman, his wife, to secure rescission of a contract for purchase of the Hornbrook Water Company and for damages. The lower court held for the Chapmans and the Carrolls have appealed. Marilyn Dungey, executrix of the estate of H. H. Chapman, deceased, has been substituted as a defendant and respondent in place of H. H. Chapman.

Plaintiffs’ action for rescission was based on alleged fraudulent representation and concealment by the Chapmans in the following particulars; (1) that the water system consisted of all new pipe; (2) that the water company had in its possession, or under its control, an adequate water supply; (3) that there was a knowing, fraudulent concealment of an *250 outstanding superior water right to the waters of Ranchería Creek, the primary source of water.

Defendants in their answer alleged affirmatively: “That plaintiffs were also fully informed of the nature of the water rights, if any, as alleged in paragraph VII of plaintiffs’ Complaint. That plaintiffs made independent investigation and viewed the premises on numerous occasions prior to purchasing the capital stock of the Hornbrook Water Company from defendants, and plaintiffs relied on their independent investigation and observation of the assets of said corporation. ’ ’

The trial court found that those paragraphs of the plaintiff’s complaint charging fraud and misrepresentation were untrue and that the allegations of the defendants’ answer were true. Judgment was entered in favor of the defendants. Plaintiffs have appealed and have launched a vigorous attack upon the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings and judgment.

H. H. Chapman owned all the stock of the Hornbrook Water Company, which served the unincorporated community of Hornbrook in Siskiyou County. The main source of water was Ranchería Creek. There were two supplementary sources: a well on the west bank of Cottonwood Creek with a pumpline to the company reservoir and a ditch which supplied water to the reservoir from Cottonwood Creek itself. The State Department of Public Health had conducted a sanitary survey of the company’s facilities and in October 1958 issued a report stating in part: ‘ ‘ The Cottonwood Creek water and the well water are subject to contamination and are unsafe for domestic use without treatment. Bacteriological samples collected at intervals during the past several years by the Bureau of Sanitary Engineering indicate the Cottonwood Creek water contains gross contamination.”

In June 1959 Chapman published an advertisement in a Los Angeles newspaper offering the water company for sale. The advertisement stated that the company was “just the thing” for a middle-aged, retired man who had some other source of income. The Carrolls, who lived in Southern California, saw the advertisement and wrote a letter inquiring about the company. They received a letter dated June 20, 1959, signed by Mrs. Chapman on behalf of Mr. Chapman which read in part: “There are 65 customers—all metered— 1.50 per month for 600 cubic feet—all new steel pipe (new two years ago). Pull price $7000 cash—Originally capitalized *251 at $12000—offered for sale two years ago at 3000 but since then have installed $4000 worth of new pipe.” In July 1959 Mr. Chapman wrote to Mr. Carroll as follows: “... First, the $7,000 is very cheap considering all pipe lines, equipment etc. The company was capitalized at $12,000 years ago and a couple of years ago I offered it for $3,000 but since then I have put in $4,000 worth of steel line making the whole system steel as of now. ’ ’

Thereafter, approximately in August or September, Carroll came to Hornbrook and Chapman took him around to observe the area and the waterworks. At that time there was no water in Ranchería Creek and the company’s water was being drawn from the well by pumping. Chapman, Carroll testified, told him that the water supply was “adequate”; that water had to be pumped from the well in an emergency; that such an emergency had occurred only three or four times in 25 years. Nothing was said about health department reports or unfitness of any of the water for human consumption.

Mrs. Chapman also advised Carroll in writing that the water supply was ‘ ‘ adequate. ’ ’

On September 12, 1959, shortly after Carroll’s return to Southern California, Chapman wrote him as follows: “You certainly had a first hand look at things at their very worst. As I told you this is the first time this has happened since 1924 and only the second in forty five years that I have known something about it. ’ ’

Thereafter the Carrolls went to the Los Angeles office of the State Public Utilities Commission and examined copies of annual reports of the Hornbrook Water Company on file in that office. On November 8, 1959, Chapman wrote Carroll as follows: “My good old Ranchería gravity water has began [sic] to come down again and so I am thru pumping for this year I guess.” Carroll made another trip to Hornbrook. The ditch bringing water into the reservoir was running full. Chapman took him up to a creek which he said was the source of the water then filling the reservoir. At that time Carroll did not know which creek was Ranchería Creek and which was Cottonwood Creek.

An agreement for purchase of the shares was executed in May 1960. During the summer of 1960 the Carrolls had to pump. In August 1960 Chapman brought to the Carrolls a box of miscellaneous papers belonging to the water company. The Carrolls examined the papers. Included in the box were several printed postcards which had been sent out by the *252 water company but returned to the sender by reason of nondelivery. These postcards revealed that in September 1955 the Hornbrook Water Company had notified its customers: “Sprinkling and irrigating must be stopped at once.” In June 1959 a few months before Chapman published the advertisement which culminated in the sale to the Carrolls, he had notified his customers: “We are now using Cottonwood Creek water. It is advisable to boil drinking water. ’ ’

Also included in the box was a 1904 deed to the Hornbrook Water Company conveying water rights in Ranchería Creek “below the ditch of S. W. Clary.” The deed had been recorded in 1913. Another item in the box was a copy of the 1958 report of the State Department of Public Health revealing the contamination of Cottonwood Creek water and the well water.

In February 1961 Carroll noticed leakage in a field through which the water company pipeline ran. Digging down through the soil, he uncovered the buried pipeline. He discovered what he described as “old crumbled up rusty pipe.” When he attempted to repair the leak by bolting metal shields around it, the entire pipe would crumble. The pipe section in question was underground and was about 800 feet long. Carroll’s testimony indicated that he was unaware of the condition of this pipe when he bought the company. He stated that he would not have purchased the company had he been aware of this condition.

At some unspecified time after the purchase Ranchería Creek stopped running. Carroll made inquiries of Chapman, who told him that there was a prior water right upstream whose owner was using the water. (Inferentially, it appears that the upper owner was the successor of S. W.

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223 Cal. App. 2d 247, 35 Cal. Rptr. 681, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 1523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-dungey-calctapp-1963.