Floyd v. Tierra Grande Development Co.

197 P. 684, 51 Cal. App. 654, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 708
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3613.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 197 P. 684 (Floyd v. Tierra Grande Development Co.) 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
Floyd v. Tierra Grande Development Co., 197 P. 684, 51 Cal. App. 654, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 708 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

SEAWELL, P. J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment rendered in favor of defendant. The complaint contains two causes of action. The first is laid on a one-year promissory note bearing date October 19, 1915, for the sum of two thousand dollars, with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum and for attorneys’ fees should suit be necessary to enforce collection. The second cause is based on an agreement in writing executed September 30, 1915, by defendant’s agent and general manager, Mrs. C. A. Lovell, by the terms of which said defendant bound itself to pay the plaintiff the sum of two thousand dollars as a commission for services rendered in promoting an exchange of real properties owned by defendant corporation and one Dr. E. D. Stoddard, respectively. Said causes of action sprang from the same real estate'transaction.

Defendant corporation was organized September 23, 1912. Mrs. C. A. Lovell, who appears in her business transactions as C. A. Lovell, is the mother of Edward J. Fleischer and Mrs. Gertrude K. Hurley. The son and daughter were the owners of several parcels of land situate in the counties of Los Angeles and Orange. To suit a family, or other purpose, not apparent, a corporation was formed, and said properties were taken over by it. While Mrs. C. A. Lovell was quite active in its management, she insists that she did not have at any time a financial interest in said corporation’s affairs. The officers of said corporation as originally organized consisted of Mrs. C. A. Lovell, president; her daughter, Gertrude K. Hurley, secretary, and her son, Edward J. Fleischer, presumably vice-president. Miss A. M. Brown, a resident of New York City, had for a brief time an official connec *656 tion with said corporation, but' was eventually dropped from membership. Her relations with it are not material to a consideration of the issues of the cause. The stock was owned by the son and daughter, who also constituted the entire board of directors. After serving as president for several months Mrs. Lovell resigned, and on November 7, 1914, she was, by resolution of the board of directors, made general manager, which position she held throughout the transaction of negotiation and exchange.

The properties owned by said corporation were heavily mortgaged and it was in arrears in the payment of interest. The Stoddard holdings consisted of eight hundred acres of land situate in Tulare County, together with livestock and farming equipment of considerable value. It was likewise heavily encumbered.

The mortgage and other indebtedness of each owner respectively amounted to upward of thirty-five thousand dollars. There is no controversy as to disparity of values.

Plaintiff Floyd, referred to by Mrs. C. A. Lovell as an elderly gentleman, was and had been for twenty years past a real estate dealer or broker located in the city of Los Angeles. He and Mrs. Lovell had been acquainted for a period of several years prior to this transaction. The respective owners of said properties having listed them with plaintiff for sale, he undertook to effect an exchange of said properties between said respective parties. Accordingly an agreement was prepared and executed. The parts thereof material to the issues presented are as follows:

“This agreement witnesseth: That Dr. E. D. Stoddard, owner of the following described piece of property situate, lying and being in the county of Tulare, state of California, particularly described as follows, to wit: [description follows.] Which I agree to exchange for the following described piece of properties owned by Mr. C. A. Lovell of Los Angeles, California, and particularly described as follows, to wit: [description follows.] . . .

“It is further agreed and understood that if for any reason whatsoever either or all principals to this agreement shall fail to comply with the game, and in consequence this exchange shall fail consummation, then the party or parties at fault agree to pay J. C. Floyd the full com *657 mission, for both sides, together with attorney and escrow charges.
“It is further agreed with J. C. Floyd that when he has received an acceptance to exchange the above properties on above terms, I will pay to him the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) as commission for such service irrespective of any commission paid by any other party. I will allow the second party fifteen (15) days time to furnish certificate of title or abstract and deed conveying the second described property.
“Dated this thirtieth day .of September, 1915.
“Dr. E. D. Stoddard.
“Ellen Stoddard.”

(Reverse side reads as follows:)

“This agreement witnesseth: That I, C. A. Lovell, of Los Angeles, California, owner of the second piece of property herein described, hereby accept the proposition of the exchange made herein and upon terms herein stated, and agree to furnish a certificate of title or abstract from a competent searcher of title within fifteen (15) days, showing property vested as deeded, and to furnish a good and sufficient deed of conveyance as directed. I agree to pay to J. C. Floyd the sum of $2,000 commission for services rendered.
“Dated this 18th day of September, 1915.
“C. A. Lovell, Mgr.”

It is admitted that said agreement was executed by C. A. Lovell on the thirtieth day of September, 1915, and not on the eighteenth day of said month as appears at the bottom of said agreement. The presence of the name C. A. Lovell in the body of the agreement as owner of the property offered by her in exchange is accounted for by plaintiff on the theory that she represented herself to be the true owner of all of the stock and property of the corporation.

Dr. Stoddard, being an elderly gentleman, was represented in the transaction by his nephew, Frank W. Ford.

[1] On October 5, 1915, certain escrow instructions or papers were prepared by the parties to the transaction, defining the obligations and duties of said parties, including an obligation on the part of .said corporation to pay to plaintiff a commission in the sum of two thousand dollars *658 for services rendered in effecting said exchange. The escrow papers were excluded from evidence, and the contents thereof are left in an uncertain state. We are permitted only to conjecture as to what they contained by scant references occasionally made to them. Said documents, nevertheless, constituted a part of the transaction in which false and fraudulent representations are relied upon to avoid an agreement. Such evidence was material to the main issues, to wit, fraud or no fraud. Said offer was not made with a purpose to vary the terms of a writ, ten contract, nor could such evidence have been properly excluded on the theory that all of the agreements of the parties were merged in the final written agreement. This evidence was offered for no such purpose. It was pertinent, however, to the question of whether or not deceit or fraudulent practices had been employed. In other words, it was admissible as evidence bearing upon the vital subject of inquiry, to wit, fraud.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 P. 684, 51 Cal. App. 654, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-tierra-grande-development-co-calctapp-1921.