Freeman v. Soukup

265 P.2d 207, 70 Nev. 198, 1953 Nev. LEXIS 42
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1953
Docket3741
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 265 P.2d 207 (Freeman v. Soukup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. Soukup, 265 P.2d 207, 70 Nev. 198, 1953 Nev. LEXIS 42 (Neb. 1953).

Opinion

*199 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

The trial court awarded the plaintiff a judgment of rescission of a contract to purchase certain ranch property from the defendant for $175,000 and for a return of plaintiff’s $25,000 down payment, upon the ground of defendant’s false and fraudulent misrepresentations of fact, upon which plaintiff relied and which were made for the purpose of inducing plaintiff to enter into the contract. Defendant has appealed from the judgment and from the order denying new trial.

Although his 86-page opening brief lists nine assignments of error, discussed under 14 separate topic headings, it is apparent that his main contention is that there is entirely lacking from the case made by plaintiff the essential element of plaintiff’s reliance upon defendant’s representations. Appellant insists that the record shows without contradiction “that plaintiff-respondent relied upon record facts and his own personal investigation, and not upon oral conversation or representation.” Upon the facts of the case and for the reasons below given, we hold that appellant’s contention is unfounded, and that his other assignments of error are without merit. We continue to refer to the parties as plaintiff and defendant respectively.

On May 25, 1950 plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement for the purchase by plaintiff from defendant of the Smoke Creek Ranch and other ranch and range lands in the vicinity owned by defendant in Washoe County, Nevada, and Lassen County, California, for $175,000 and for the further purchase of defendant’s livestock and equipment at a price to be agreed upon *200 later. Plaintiff had 90 days to complete the purchase. The only written evidence of the transaction was a check drawn by plaintiff to defendant for $25,000, on the back of which was endorsed: “This down payment of $25,000 on the Smoke Creek Ranch, balance of $150,000 to be paid upon satisfactory examination of all papers and delivery title to me free of all [indebtedness]. Stock & equipment to be sold on price agreed upon. Purchaser has ninety [days] to complete purchase.” Under this memorandum defendant endorsed his name and cashed the check. Although no contract was ever entered into for the purchase of the cattle, horses and equipment, it appeared that the entire deal for all of the real and personal property would have involved a sum of over $400,000.

The execution of the $25,000 check and memorandum endorsed thereon was the culmination of a number of meetings between the parties. Plaintiff was looking for a ranch and cattle property and learned through a Reno realtor, in December, 1949, that defendant’s property was for sale. He telephoned defendant from Reno and pursuant to agreement met him at the ranch next morning. He again visited the ranch with defendant in February, 1950. The extent of his observation and examination of the property on those two occasions is discussed later. Defendant first put a price of $340,000 on the ranch. He later reduced this to $275,000, and still later to $175,000, with a $75,000 down payment. The final deal was, as above noted, for $175,000 with a $25,000 down payment. ■

On May 31, 1950, pursuant to defendant’s request for a further payment, plaintiff made out a second $25,000 check and caused it to be mailed to defendant with an earnest money receipt indicating that this was a further payment upon the ranch. On June 6 or 7, 1950 plaintiff again visited the property with two expert and experienced ranch and livestock men and as a result of this inspection and of their advice pursuant thereto, *201 stopped payment on the check 1 and immediately thereafter gave defendant a written notice of the' rescission of the contract with a demand for a return of his $25,000 down payment, reciting as his reasons his discovery oí the falsity of sundry representations made by defendant concerning the property. Upon defendant’s insistence upon the terms of the contract, plaintiff commenced the action for rescission.

The specific items of alleged misrepresentation pleaded in plaintiff’s second amended complaint, upon which the issues were drawn, and the actual facts existing’ contrary to such representations and the respective findings of the court with reference to each separate issue may be summarized as follows:

(a) Plaintiff represented that the ranch had a Taylor Grazing permit 2 to run 2,850 head of cattle on the public *202 domain from April 1 to October 31 each year. The court found the fact to be that the permit was only for 2,350 head of cattle for five months each year, but further found that this fact was known to plaintiff on May 31, 1950 when he made out his second $25,000 check to defendant. Plaintiff had, as a matter of fact, obtained copies of defendant’s Taylor Grazing permits from the grazing office the day before and had them in his possession the day before he issued the said second check. The district court, while holding that there was some question as to plaintiff’s knowledge of the Washoe county taxes and while he was not chargeable with knowledge of the hay and grain production or reservoir costs, as hereinafter discussed, clearly stated that the defendant was chargeable with knowledge of the extent of the Taylor Grazing rights. While it is true that a subsequent finding made by the court is inconsistent with this language, we do not feel justified in ignoring it and must conclude that plaintiff did not act in reliance upon this representation nor could he have been prejudiced thereby. This item thus becomes eliminated from the case.

(b) It is next alleged that defendant represented that the ranch comprised an acreage of 19,400 acres of deeded land but that the same did not exceed 15,000 acres of deeded land. The court found the representation to be 17,500 to 18,000 acres and the actual ownership to comprise 17,632.62 acres. As stated in its opinion: “The court has found [this] alleged misrepresentation to be substantially correct.” It is clear then that this item of alleged misrepresentation affords no ground for relief.

(c) The next misrepresentation alleged is that the *203 taxes did not exceed $2,200 annually, whereas the taxes for the fiscal year 1949-1950 were $4,388.60. The court’s finding of fact No. 4 finds that the taxes on the real property, including those in Washoe County, Nevada, and Lassen County, California, were $2,563.43 for the fiscal year 1949-1950. It can hardly be said that the difference is material in view of the magnitude of the transaction and in view of plaintiff’s admitted possession of the California tax receipts at the time he made the second $25,000 attempted payment, and in view of his actual production from his own file at the trial, of the Nevada tax receipts, although he denied knowledge, of the latter or any knowledge of how they had come into his possession. It is clear that the court did not base, and could not have based, its judgment for a rescission of the contract upon a misrepresentation of the amount of taxes assessed against the ranch or upon the plaintiff’s reliance on such alleged misrepresentation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 P.2d 207, 70 Nev. 198, 1953 Nev. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-soukup-nev-1953.