Graber v. Mayem

299 F. Supp. 243, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8518
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMarch 27, 1969
DocketCiv. No. 67-497
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 299 F. Supp. 243 (Graber v. Mayem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graber v. Mayem, 299 F. Supp. 243, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8518 (D. Or. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

KILKENNY, District Judge:

After some preliminary discussions, the defendants Mayem sold a tract of land to the plaintiffs Graber. The property is located in Los Gatos, California. The Grabers claim that the Mayems misrepresented the area of the property sold and that they purchased it in reliance on those representations. Plaintiffs seek a recision of the land sale contract or, in the alternative, damages sustained in receiving less land than agreed.

At the time of the sale in December, 1964, the Mayems owned and had lived on their Los Gatos, California property for approximately ten years. They previously made an attempt to sell the property by listing it as an area of one and one-half acres. This listing brought one offer of $70,000.00. The Mayems refused this offer. A few months before the sale in question, Mr. Mayem placed a home-made “for sale” sign on the property. The sign read simply “For Sale Dec. 3. This property for sale commercial — inquire within.” A few months later the plaintiff, Mrs. Graber, viewed the property and talked to defendants. What was said at this meeting between the Mayems, Mrs. Graber and a Mr. Lawrence is in dispute. Evidently, most of the discussion was between Mrs. Mayem, who because of illness did not appear at trial, and Mrs. Graber. On September 10, 1964, the Mayems gave the Grabers an option to purchase. The option referred to the property as “two acres more or less.” On December 7, 1964, the Mayems and Grabers agreed on a sale price of $100,-000.00 and again described the property in the deposit receipt as “two acres more or less.”

On January 5, 1965, plaintiffs listed the property for sale for $195,000.00, authorized the broker to sell the property on March 22, 1965. On August 9, 1966, they listed the property with another agency for $190,000.00. It was at the time of this listing that Mrs. Graber says she discovered that the area of the property she purchased was significantly less than two acres. Her broker ascertained from the recorded plat that the area of the Mayem property was approximately one and one-half acres.

During the time between the sale and the commencement of this suit, the plaintiffs, with some pressure by defendants, continued to make payments on the contract. Also, during this time, the Grabers leased part of the property to various tenants. In a letter dated November 6, 1966, Mrs. Graber wrote Mrs. Mayem that she now knew the true area and would not have paid the sum she did had she known. In March, 1967, Mrs. Graber, nevertheless, made another payment. Later, in a letter dated August 9, 1967, Mrs. Graber, through her Oregon attorney, gave the Mayems formal notice of her intention to rescind the contract of sale on the grounds of misrepresentation.

Mrs. Graber’s version of her discussions with the Mayems differ substantially from the testimony and deposition of Mr. Mayem and Mrs. Mayem’s deposition. Her contention is that she told Mrs. Mayem that she wanted the property to operate a nursing home and that she would need at least two acres for that purpose; that the Mayems assured her they had had the property surveyed and that there were two acres; and, that she purchased in reliance on those assurances. Mrs. Graber contends that the Mayems intentionally deceived her since they knew at the time of their listing the property that the acreage was only one and one-half acres.

Defendants deny that any representations were made as to the area of the property; that either of them ever knew what the area was; and also deny that any statements they did make were relied upon by plaintiffs. Defendants also [245]*245assert certain affirmative defenses, the merits of which I do not reach.

Plaintiffs’ case fails on the most basic requirement in a suit for recision of a contract for material misrepresentation1 by a party, i.e. plaintiffs fail to show by clear and convincing evidence that what statements the Mayems did make concerning the area of their property were representations of fact, rather than mere expressions of opinion. According to California law, applicable to this case because of the location of the real property involved, the test of whether a seller’s statement will be considered a representation of fact, rather than an expression of opinion, is whether the statement:

“ * * * is asserted as an existing fact, material to the transaction, and which has a reasonable tendency to induce one of the parties to the transaction to consider and rely upon such representations as a fact, * * Harris v. Miller, 196 Cal. 8, 235 P. 981, 983 (1925).

A resolution of the conflicting accounts of the statements of the parties surrounding the sale demonstrates plaintiffs’ failure to meet this test. Mrs. Graber’s version of the conversations between Mrs. Mayem and herself is not creditable. Her testimony was that she told Mrs. Mayem that she wanted the property for a nursing home, that she would need two acres for that purpose, and that Mrs. Mayem represented that the land had been surveyed and did, in fact, contain two acres of land. Mrs. Mayem states in her deposition that she was never told the purpose for which the property was wanted. I believe this later version. Moreover, Mrs. Mayem’s deposition indicates she told Mrs. Graber that she did not know the exact area of the land because it had not been surveyed, but that she thought it was about two acres. Mr. Mayem’s testimony supports this. The testimony of Mr. Lawrence, the real estate agent involved in the sale, is vague and of little value. Mrs. Graber’s demeanor on the witness stand did not support her credibility. Her story about buying the property for a nursing home must be surveyed cum grano salis in light of (1) her expertise in buying and selling real estate as a business, (2) her placing the property on the market soon after she bought it, and (3) the fact alluded to in the briefs that the zoning laws for the area where the property was located would not have supported such a use.

Mrs. Mayem’s version of what she told Mrs. Graber regarding the area of the property is much more believeable. She says she told Mrs. Graber:

“This piece in the back looks like quite a large piece. I don’t know how much is there in the back of the house, but it looks to me like it should be about two acres, but I don’t know. It’s never been surveyed.”

This version corresponds with the recitals in the deposit receipt and the contract of sale describing the property as “two acres more or less.” It also corresponds with the relative lack of sophistication the Mayems had in such matters and their undisputed assertion that their property, so far as they knew, had never been surveyed. Mr. Mayem’s confusion, obvious from his testimony, as to the area of the property, effectively counters plaintiffs’ contention that the Mayems knew the property contained considerably less than two acres. On the whole, defendants’ version of what occurred is the more believeable.

[246]*246The fact that the Mayems statements concerning the area of their property were couched in proximate terms and seemed to disclaim any pretense of accuracy do not, of themselves, render their statements expressions of opinion rather than representations of fact. A statement that property contained about two acres, or two acres more or less, could be a representation of fact that the property acreage varied only slightly from the stated amount. Harder v. Lang Realty, 61 Cal.App. 394, 214 P. 1017 (1923).

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Bluebook (online)
299 F. Supp. 243, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graber-v-mayem-ord-1969.