Divani v. Donovan

6 P.2d 247, 214 Cal. 447, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 452
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1931
DocketDocket No. L.A. 11083.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 247 (Divani v. Donovan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Divani v. Donovan, 6 P.2d 247, 214 Cal. 447, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 452 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff in an action for damages resulting from the fraudulent representations of the defendants Donovan in the sale of real and personal property to the plaintiff.

The defendant Jeanette G. Donovan, the mother of the defendant Jack Donovan, was the record owner of a lot improved by a residence and garage known as 13047 San Vicente Boulevard, Los Angeles. On April 30, 1926, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the defendant Jack Donovan to purchase this piece of property, including all furniture and furnishings, pipe-organ, etc., for the sum of $50,000. On May 3, 1926, the defendant Jeanette G. Donovan executed and delivered a deed to the premises. On May 11, 1926, the plaintiff and the defendant Jack Donovan entered into a written contract for the construction of an addition consisting of two bedrooms, dressing-room and bath for, the sum of $6,000, which the plaintiff paid. The plaintiff assumed a mortgage, gave her note and trust deed for a portion of the purchase price, and made the installment payments under the contract, the details of which it is not necessary to recite. -This appeal does not present for review the issues raised by the plaintiff respecting the note and mortgage involving the defendants other than the defendants Jack Donovan and Jeanette G. Donovan, since the plaintiff has not taken an appeal from the judgment against her on those issues. Therefore, reference herein to the defendants will include only the defendants Donovan, mother and son.

The first question for consideration is whether the findings favorable to the plaintiff on the issues of fraud are supported by the evidence. The undisputed events leading up to the purchase of the property by the plaintiff are briefly the following:

On the evening of April 28, 1926, at the instance of the Donovans, the plaintiff called at their home at 13047 San *450 Vicente Boulevard, making a visit of about one hour in duration. During this visit the defendants entertained the plaintiff with music and refreshments. The plaintiff expressed herself as charmed with the defendants’ home and its furnishings and decorations, and at the invitation of the mother, was shown through the house and gardens. The defendants pointed out pieces which they stated were authentic antiques, some of them heirlooms, and very valuable, especially referring, among other articles, to an Empire bed, desk and chairs, also to a shrine in the patio which the plaintiff particularly admired and which was stated by the defendants to be an ancient shrine recovered from a church which had been torn down. During this visit it was suggested by Mrs. Donovan that she would like to see the plaintiff possess such a restful place as her home, to which the plaintiff demurred that the Donovans would not wish to sell their own home and furnishings, and to which Mrs. Donovan replied that in the plaintiff’s case it would be different. The next morning the defendant Jack Donovan telephoned to the plaintiff and stated to her that they had a bona fide offer from a major to purchase the home, but that they wanted the plaintiff to consider it, and that if she wanted it she would have to make a quick decision. The plaintiff called again at the Donovan home that morning and stayed for about an hour. The defendants do not dispute, in fact they concede, that representations were made as hereinbefore stated respecting the furniture and furnishings, and also respecting the great skill and fame of the defendant Jack Donovan as an architect and builder, and that nothing but the very best of everything, materials and workmanship, had been put into the construction of the home, which had been built by Jack Donovan as a home for himself and his mother and not as a place to sell. The plaintiff testified: “I asked what price he held it at. He said $75,000, and I said I could not give that price, what other price did he have. And he said, well, seeing it’s you, $50,000, and then we discussed how it would be paid, and I left the house that morning saying that I would take the house.”

The contract signed on April 30th provided that certain changes in landscaping would be effected and that the defendant Jack Donovan would supervise the construction of the addition of two bedrooms, dressing-room, and bathroom *451 fitted with a Marathon shower, and the enlargement of the kitchen and laundry and servants’ quarters over the garage. In this respect it is in evidence that the defendant Jack Donovan represented that such additions would be made at cost and that he himself would provide without charge his services in planning and supervising the construction of the wing and enlargements, which would be of the very best materials and workmanship to conform with the superior construction of the main building, and that the cost thereof would not exceed $3,000. The defendant Jack Donovan also represented that he would plant new shrubbery where it was wanted by the plaintiff, of the value of $1,000 to $1500, and install electrically controlled locks on two driveway gates. On May 11, 1926, Jack Donovan presented to the plaintiff for signature a contract providing $6,000 as the price of the new wing and enlargements. The construction was completed and the plaintiff took possession about July, 1926.

It would extend this discussion beyond reasonable limits to detail all of the evidence bearing upon the issue of the falsity of these representations and others which were found by the trial court to have been made. Suffice it to say that the evidence fully supports the finding of the trial court that the construction of the house was of poor and inferior quality and workmanship; that the hardwood floors were of such inferior grade and construction that they cupped and buckled; that the plaster fell off; that the exterior stucco fell off and the waters penetrated the cracked stucco to the sheathing which became rotted and warped; that the foundation became out of line; that the plumbing and wiring were defective; also that the cost of the additions and changes were not of the value of $6,000; that the new bath was not fitted with a Marathon shower nor with tiling as agreed; that the materials used in the construction of the additions were crude and of inferior quality and workmanship; that a porch in the servants’ quarters over the garage was constructed in a flimsy manner, was unsafe and dangerous to use; that the premises were subject to overflow of storm waters which the defendants well knew and that no adequate drainage was provided. It is undisputed, and the court found, that certain articles in the house, including the Empire bed, chairs and other pieces, *452 and the shrine in the patio, had been removed, and that cheap and inferior substitutions had been made and put in their places, and that a desk, a harp and certain pictures had also been removed. It was also found and not disputed that the shrubbery promised had not been planted and that electrically controlled locks had not been installed on the driveway gates. Many details of inferior quality of materials and construction found by the trial court are not mentioned herein. The court found generally that all of the representations made were false and known by the defendants so to be, and made with the intent to wrong and defraud the plaintiff, and were relied upon by her.

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 247, 214 Cal. 447, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/divani-v-donovan-cal-1931.