Craig v. Shea

188 P. 73, 45 Cal. App. 351, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 273
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 3160.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 188 P. 73 (Craig v. Shea) 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
Craig v. Shea, 188 P. 73, 45 Cal. App. 351, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 273 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

WOOD, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding $3,750 damages for false representations made by the agent of defendant upon the sale of a thirty-acre walnut grove. Mr. Craig died after the entry of judgment, *352 and the executrix of his will has been substituted as plaintiff.

There is no dispute as to the representations made by the agent of defendant. It is alleged in the complaint, and the plaintiff testified at the trial, that he purchased the property believing and relying upon such representations, which were “That fifteen acres of the 'grove was planted to trees of the age of twelve years, and the remaining fifteen acres to trees of the age of eighteen years; that the gross income of the orchard would be from twelve to eighteen per cent upon thirty thousand dollars.” Prior to coming to California Mr. Craig had been for many years the assistant controller of the United States Steel Corporation. His business did not bring him in contact with outside people, and while he had made some investments in real estate he had always acted through the advice of an attorney. He arrived in Los Angeles from New York City in April, 1914. At that time he was sixty-two years of age, in poor health, suffering from rheumatism, accompanied with severe pains in his legs, and was unable to walk more than a few feet at a time. Previously he had written to his daughter-in-law in Los Angeles to see if she could find a walnut grove for him." She had communicated his wishes to Neil Durflinger, who was employed under some form of contract, sharing commissions, in the office of Mr. Mesick, a real estate agent. Within two or three days after his arrival in Los Angeles City he, his wife, and Ms daughter-in-law were taken in an automobile by Mr. Mesick and Mr. Durflinger to see the grove in question, which is located about thirteen miles from the city. On the.way Mr. Mesick told plaintiff that he was going to show him one of the prettiest ranches in Southern California. He also made the statements as to the ages of the' trees, and some time during the day the one as to income. The party remained at the grove about fifteen or twenty minutes. The plaintiff walked out and examined two of the trees, and drove about the place. He was charmed with its appearance. In his language, “It was certainly a pretty looking ranch, and it is to-day. I had never seen a walnut ranch bearing, and we stood around in amazement looking at those trees. They were very large and fine looking, in blossom, with the leaves just budding out, and there was a nice fence in front with roses *353 at every post.” The same evening, in response to his invitation, Mr. Mesick called upon Mr. Craig, at which time the latter requested the agent to submit an offer of twenty-five thousand dollars to Mr. Shea, and at Mr. Mesick’s suggestion he gave him his check for one thousand dollars as an evidence of good faith. His offer was accepted the following day and the transaction thereafter closed. Mr. Mesick received a commission from the defendant upon the sale, but had no previous authorization from Mr. Shea to sell the property. The latter had purchased it in 1913, expecting to make it his home. Some three months before the sale to plaintiff he changed his mind, and spoke to Mr. Mesick, with whom he had been on “intimate friendly terms for years,” about finding a purchaser for thirty thousand dollars. He told Mr. Mesick that the trees were twelve and eighteen years old. He made no statement of any kind in reference to income from the property, and he testified at the trial that he obtained his information as to the age of the trees from the former owner of the property. Mr. Shea and Mr. Craig never met until some time after the sale was consummated.

The trial court found that the trees were of i the age of twenty-eight and forty-two years respectively,' instead of twelve and eighteen years, as represented, and that the property would have been worth $3,750 more than its actual value if the trees had been of the ages as represented.

Plaintiff produced four witnesses of experience in walnut-growing who testified that hard-shell nut trees of the age of forty-two years produce no income, and they variously estimated that the fifteen-acre tract would have been of a value of from two hundred to five hundred dollars greater with walnuts of the age of eighteen years. On the other hand, there were eight witnesses for the defendant, of many years’ experience in the walnut industry, five of whom were appraisers for banks making loans upon property in the locality. They testified that the age of trees will not diminish the production or lessen the value of this land with its deep, rich alluvial soil. As trees grow larger the limbs interlace and overlap, so that it then becomes necessary to remove some of the trees to let in the sunlight and air, which increases the production per tree to the extent that it does not lessen the output from an acre.

*354 In confirmation of this theory it appears that in 1911 there was an injurious and drastic pruning of the orchard by one of the witnesses, who testified that a hard-shell tree had no value after it reached the age of.forty years. At that time one of the defendant’s witnesses expostulated with the wielder of the pruning implements, and told him that it would take five years for the trees to recover. This pruning is characterized by counsel for both appellant and respondent as no less a crime than that of “murder.” It was also shown that the year 1914 was a poor year for hard-shell nuts all over the county.

The value of the crop of the entire orchard for each of the years 1913 and 1914 was less than two-thirds of the. amount that plaintiff’s witnesses estimated it should be from fifteen acres of soft-shell trees, such as composed the younger grove. Mr. Gooch, who for nearly twenty-five years up to 1912 was president of the Walnut Growers’ Association, and who handled and inspected the nuts that came from this property during all that time, testified, without contradiction, that it always produced good average crops.

Having shown that there is a difference of opinion among walnut growers themselves as to the materiality of the statements as to the age of the trees, we approach the vital question as to whether the evidence shows that the plaintiff was in fact influenced by such statements or considered them to be material.

The court did not find that the plaintiff placed any reliance upon the representation as to income, but it did find “that he was induced to purchase the property because he relied upon the statements as to the ages of the trees.”

“By express provision of the Civil Code, consent to a contract is deemed to have been obtained through fraud ‘only when it would not have been given had such cause not existed.’ (Sec. 1568.) ” (Elliott v. Southern Pacific Co., 145 Cal. 441, 448, [68 L. R A. 393, 79 Pac. 420, 423].)

[1] In order for plaintiff to recover, the misrepresentation “need not be the sole cause of the contract, but it must be of such nature, weight, and force that the court can say ‘without it the contract would not have been made. ’ ” (Colton v. Stanford, 82 Cal. 399, [16 Am. St. Rep. 137, 23 Pac, 28].) (See, also, Oppenheimer v. Clunie,

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Bluebook (online)
188 P. 73, 45 Cal. App. 351, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-shea-calctapp-1919.