Dettler v. Santa Cruz

403 S.W.2d 651, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 642
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1966
Docket32232
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 403 S.W.2d 651 (Dettler v. Santa Cruz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dettler v. Santa Cruz, 403 S.W.2d 651, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 642 (Mo. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

Appellants seek reversal of a judgment rendered against them and in favor of respondent in the sum of $5,500.00 actual damages and $2,000.00 punitive damages rendered in respondent’s action for dam *653 ages resulting from appellants’ false and fraudulent representations regarding the use of a building purchased by respondent from the appellants. Among other allegations of prejudicial error the appellants contend the trial court should have sustained their separate motions for directed verdicts offered at the close of all the evidence. In passing upon that allegation we are required to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the respondent and the facts bearing upon that point will be so stated. The parties will hereafter be referred to by name or by their designation in the trial court.

In February of 1961 the defendants purchased a house located at 5732 Waterman in the City of St. Louis. At the date of their purchase and throughout their ownership the house was rented as a three family dwelling. In April of 1961 the defendants received a letter from the administrative assistant to the building commissioner of the City of St. Louis stating that use of this dwelling as a three family apartment was illegal under the zoning ordinances of the city as it was located in an area zone for single family occupancy. On June 2 of that same year Mr. and Mrs. Santa Cruz were sent a similar letter. On the 12th of that same month they were sent another letter and subsequent letters were sent to them on December 12 and on January 4, October 8, and October 29 of 1962. The letter of October 8 stated that there was a violation of zoning ordinance 50547, section 6, in that occupancy was in excess of one family and warned the owners to “reduce occupancy to one family use at once.” The letter of October 29 contained the same admonition.

About the middle of November the defendants inserted an advertisement in a St. Louis newspaper offering this property for sale as three family income property. Plaintiff answered the advertisement and inspected the property with Mr. Santa Cruz who, during the course of the negotiations between the parties, told her each of the three units could be rented separately and what the rental of each unit was. Plaintiff inspected the property with her ex-husband, Dettler, who was to examine the construction of the building and on another occasion with Allen Bailey, her husband at the date of trial. Negotiations followed and on November 30, 1962, the defendant Santa Cruz prepared a sales contract which plaintiff and Santa Cruz signed. On December 6, 1962, the city sent yet another letter to Santa Cruz and also sent a copy to Mr. Lochirco. The closing of the sale took place at the end of that same month with plaintiff, her ex-husband Dettler, and the male defendants present. Also present was Mr. Friedman, a real estate agent whose presence and services Santa Cruz had arranged. The plaintiff never knew Mr. Friedman prior to the closing nor had any contact with him. She paid him $53.00 for his services at the closing. On April 25, 1963, the city directed a letter similar to those previously sent to Mr. Lochirco with a copy to Mr. and Mrs. Santa Cruz. In May of that year, having discovered the sale to the plaintiff, the city authorities sent a letter to her and followed with another to her on July 9. A suit against the plaintiff due to the violation of the city ordinance was set for trial the day following trial of the instant action.

Both Lochirco and Santa Cruz were called as an adverse witness by plaintiff. Lo-chirco’s testimony was that he was a barber by trade but that four or five times prior to the purchase of the property here involved he had bought income property to supplement his income; that Santa Cruz had negotiated the sale for all the defendants with the result that he first met plaintiff at the closing of the sale; that he had received letters from the building commissioner’s office starting in April of 1961 asking him to reduce the use of the property to a single family dwelling; and that he never told the plaintiff of these letters. Santa Cruz testified that he had purchased a couple of parcels of real estate but had never been in the real estate business; that he told plaintiff the property was a three *654 family dwelling because that was the way they had purchased it; that “I knew that the City of St. Louis had sent us a couple of notices on this, notifying us that it was in Zone A, single family, which I knew it was * * * ”; that he had known of the restriction to single family occupancy for about 1Y2 years prior to the sale to plaintiff but that he believed the city to be in error as to this.

Some evidence regarding the physical appearance of the other buildings in the block in which this house was located is in order. Four or five doors away from the dwelling in question there was a large apartment building and the plaintiff also testified that there were three buildings across the street from the property here involved that appeared to her to be two family flats. The defendants rely upon certain portions of the testimony of one of the plaintiff’s witnesses which, they contend, illustrates that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and was put upon notice to investigate the actual zoning conditions further than merely relying upon Santa Cruz’s representations upon observing that the dwelling here involved was the only apartment in the block. This evidence was as follows: One of plaintiff’s witnesses was asked about the buildings in the block in which the dwelling here involved was located and answered that the majority, of the buildings were single family dwellings. He was then asked if any of the buildings on the block were apartments and replied that he could not answer without looking again at the block as it had been some time since he had viewed this area. The answers upon which the defendants rely followed. The witness was asked, “Are all of the buildings on there homes ? ” He answered that they all were except for one at the corner. He was then asked if all the buildings on both sides of the street were “homes” and his answer was yes. The next question was whether or not it would appear to anyone walking down the street that those buildings were “homes” and his answer was that it would.

The plaintiff submitted her case under a modified version of MAI 23.05. The first paragraph of that instruction required the jury to find Santa Cruz was the agent for the other defendants and was acting as such and within the scope of this agency for the others when he dealt with the plaintiff with respect to this property. The second paragraph of that instruction reads: “Second, defendant Carlos Santa Cruz represented to plaintiff that the real estate consisted of three separate apartment units which could be separately rented for income to the purchaser of the real estate, intending that plaintiff rely upon such representation in purchasing the real estate, * * The third paragraph requires the jury to find the representation was false.

The plaintiff did not offer a measure of damage instruction taken from MAI but submitted her own instruction on that issue.

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Bluebook (online)
403 S.W.2d 651, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dettler-v-santa-cruz-moctapp-1966.