Gnash v. Saari

267 P.2d 674, 44 Wash. 2d 312, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 285
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1954
Docket32562
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 267 P.2d 674 (Gnash v. Saari) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gnash v. Saari, 267 P.2d 674, 44 Wash. 2d 312, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 285 (Wash. 1954).

Opinion

Donworth, J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing an action for damages for fraud in the sale of certain real property. One phase of the case previously was before this court in Gnash v. Saari, 40 Wn. (2d) 59, 240 P. (2d) 930. The present action was tried to the court sitting without a jury. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered judgment for defendants. Plaintiff has appealed.

In substance, appellant’s complaint alleged that for some time prior to May 16, 1949, respondents had been the contract owners of the real property described therein and had operated the building situated thereon as an apartment house; that respondents knew that the building had been converted from a single family residence and that its use as an apartment house was in violation of certain enumerated sections of the Seattle building code which made it unlawful to alter, repair, or convert any building to another use unless a permit was first secured from the proper city authorities.

The complaint also alleged that the Federal rent control *314 act of 1947 was then in effect, that respondents knew of its existence, had applied for adjustments of rents under its provisions, and had been refused, but that they fraudulently concealed this information from appellant.

Appellant further alleged that, although the violation of the provisions of the building code and the denial of the petition for rent adjustments were peculiarly within respondents’ knowledge and unknown to appellant, respondents falsely represented that: (1) the property could be

operated as income property and was in fact income property, and (2) that the rents had been authorized by rent control authorities at two hundred eighty-eight dollars per month.

Appellant also alleged that respondents’ operation of the property as an apartment house in violation of the Seattle building code made the title to the property “unmerchantable,” and that respondents had refused to make changes necessary to make the building conform to the requirements of the building code as demanded by appellant. It was finally alleged that, in reliance upon the misrepresentations made by respondents, appellant executed a contract to purchase the property and thereby suffered damages in the sum of six thousand dollars.

In their answer, respondents admitted that for some time prior to May 16, 1949, they had been the contract owners of the property and had operated it as an apartment house.

Respondents denied that the title to the property was unmerchantable, admitted the execution of the contract of sale to appellant, and denied that any false or fraudulent representations were made to induce the sale.

The evidence discloses the following facts:

In the summer of 1948, Mrs. Saari’s mother, Mrs. Galuska, came from the east to live with respondents. In a short time, she told them she wanted to acquire a place of her own which would yield some income. Mrs. Galuska had little formal education, did not write English, and spoke it only brokenly. When inspecting properties shown her by Mr. De-Turenne, a real-estate agent for Clifton Albright Realty Company, she was accompanied by her daughter.

*315 On October 21, 1948, a contract of sale on the property here involved was executed by the then owners, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Burton, as vendors and by the respondents as vendees, although Mrs. Galuska supplied the money for the down payment. The next day, respondents listed the property for sale with the same realty company.

Mrs. Galuska moved into one of the upstairs apartments and rented the other three. In February, 1949, the first floor of the building was rented for the first time. The rent charged for this unit was one hundred dollars per month. On February 28, 1949, Mr. Saari visited the Seattle rent control office to determine whether the one hundred dollars rent was legal under the rent control act. He was informed that it was, but also learned that the rents being charged for the upstairs units were in excess of the legal máximums. With the aid of the rental authorities, he prepared a petition for increases in rents for the upstairs units, based upon the fact that repairs and improvements had been made since the rent ceilings had been set and also because an additional tenant was living in one unit.

Mr. Saari signed the petition as “landlord” and was told he would be notified later whether the petition would be approved or denied. He made no further inquiries prior to the sale on May 16, 1949. On May 11, 1949, an order denying his petition for higher rents was entered, and, according to records of the rent control authority, a copy of the order was mailed to him. He denied that he ever received a copy of the order.

Appellant had noticed a “for sale” sign on the property and stopped to inspect it. She and a friend were shown through the property by Mrs. Galuska, who told appellant the rent being charged for each apartment. Appellant asked if these rents had been approved by the OPA (the term the parties used to designate the Federal rent control authority) and was referred to Mr. DeTurenne. He told her that the rents amounted to $288 per month (including the rental value of the apartment occupied by Mrs. Gal-uska) , and that these rents had been approved by the OPA. *316 The rents which Mr. DeTurenne reported to appellant were the same amounts reported to her by Mrs. Galuska.

In addition to the $288 per month in rents from the apartments, there was $12 a month income from the rent of two garages, making the total income from the property as represented to appellant $300 a month.

Appellant inspected the property two or three times before deciding to buy, but she did not check further on the representations made by Mrs. Galuska or Mr. DeTurenne. Appellant never talked directly to respondents and, in fact, thought that Mrs. Galuska was the owner until she saw respondents’ names on the contract of sale.

Appellant took immediate possession in May, 1949, continued to charge the same rentals that Mrs. Galuska had been charging, and later redecorated and added new furniture and furnishings at a total cost of about $1,600.

In December, 1949, she applied for a permit to install an additional electric meter downstairs and learned for the first time that the building was classed by the city of Seattle as a single family residence. She was told that substantial alterations would be necessary if she desired to use the building as an apartment house. She had plans drawn incorporating the necessary changes, and the plans were approved and a permit issued authorizing the repairs. Appellant also secured permission from the Seattle department of buildings to continue operation of the building as an apartment house until the repairs were completed. At the time of trial, the work had not begun, but her expert witnesses testified the work would cost approximately $2,650.

Although appellant continued to charge the same rentals, it was not until December, 1951, that she was informed by the OPA that they were in excess of the legal máximums.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P.2d 674, 44 Wash. 2d 312, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gnash-v-saari-wash-1954.