Gratz v. Schuler

142 P. 899, 25 Cal. App. 117, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 168
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 8, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1330.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 142 P. 899 (Gratz v. Schuler) 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
Gratz v. Schuler, 142 P. 899, 25 Cal. App. 117, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 168 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

In this action the plaintiff sought and recovered damages for fraud and deceit alleged to have been perpetrated upon him by the defendants in the negotiation and consummation of an agreement for the purchase and sale of a picture machine, known as the “Kaiser Panorama,” which the defendants owned and, at the time of the sale, were exhibiting at a place of public amusement in the city and county of San Francisco. The fraud and deceit complained of in the plaintiff’s complaint consisted of the following alleged false representations by the defendants: 1. That the defendants had paid the sum of one thousand nine hundred dollars for the panorama; 2. That because of its earning capacity it was worth the sum of one thousand nine hundred dollars for exhibition purposes; 3. That the panorama had been earning twenty dollars a day; 4. That the defendants had been offered one hundred dollars per month to exhibit it at Idora Park in the city of Oakland; and, 5. That it was a valuable device for exhibition purposes, and would earn for the plaintiff the sum of twenty dollars per day.

Plaintiff’s complaint further averred that the defendants willfully and knowingly made such alleged false representations with the intent and for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiff; and that, believing such false representations and relying solely thereon, he purchased the panorama and paid therefor the sum of one thousand one hundred dollars.

*119 All of the material allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint were denied by the answer of the defendants. The issues thus raised were tried with a jury, and a verdict rendered for the plaintiff in the sum of one thousand dollars. From the judgment entered thereon and from an order denying a new trial the defendants have appealed.

The insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict is the principal point relied upon for a reversal. The point is well taken. The ease of the plaintiff, in so far as the making and falsity of the representations were concerned, was rested entirely upon, his own testimony, and such testimony did not in the slightest degree tend to show the falsity of the defendants’ alleged representations concerning the original cost of the panorama. Upon the other hand, the testimony of the defendants, uncontradicted and unimpeached either by direct or circumstantial evidence, was to the effect that they had paid one thousand nine hundred dollars for the panorama. Plainly, therefore, the verdict cannot be supported upon the theory that the evidence shows that the defendants falsely' represented the original cost of the panorama.

We have searched the record in vain for any evidence which even remotely tends to support the allegations of the complaint that the defendants represented to the plaintiff that the panorama would earn for him the sum of twenty dollars per day. In this behalf the plaintiff’s testimony in its entirety reveals nothing more than that the defendants said to him when negotiating the sale that they had been offered one hundred dollars per month to exhibit the panorama at Idora Park, and that “it makes lots of money; . . . you can bring it to Idora Park and . . . rent it out.”

Conceding that the false representation concerning the future earning capacity of the panorama would, under all of the circumstances of the present case, constitute a good cause of action for fraud and deceit, nevertheless it is clear that the plaintiff’s testimony upon this phase of the case would not support a finding that the defendants had falsely represented that the panorama would earn a specified sum per day. Stripped of immaterial matters, the sum and substance of plaintiff’s testimony upon direct and cross-examination is that he was induced to pay the sum of eleven hundred dollars for the panorama solely because of the representation that it had in the past earned twenty dollars per day, and *120 that he could place it in Idora Park at a monthly rental of one hundred dollars. Further testifying in this behalf the plaintiff in effect said that while the statement as to past earnings influenced him to buy the panorama, nevertheless the representation that he could rent it to Idora Park had to a greater extent influenced him, because there it “would pay more interest on the money than the German Bank.”

It follows that the verdict and judgment can be sustained only upon the theory that the evidence shows that the plaintiff was induced to purchase and part with his money solely by reason of the false representation that the panorama had been earning twenty dollars per day, and that he could rent it to the management of Idora Park for one hundred dollars per month. While the conflict in the evidence upon this phase of the case was resolved in favor of the plaintiff, we are satisfied that under all of the circumstances of the transaction in suit, such representations, even if falsely made, were not as a matter of law sufficient to warrant a verdict and judgment for damages upon the ground of deceit.

Fraud is the basis of an action for damages for deceit; and when such action arises out of alleged false representations of a material fact the plaintiff, in order to prevail, must ordinarily show not only that such representations were knowingly false and made with intent to deceive, but that the plaintiff, relying upon such false representations and while acting with-reasonable prudence, was thereby deceived into doing something to his detriment.

It may be conceded that the undisputed fact in the present case, that the panorama never at any time after the plaintiff finally purchased it earned more than five dollars per day, was sufficient to warrant the finding of the jury implied from the verdict that the representations of the defendants as to its previous earnings were false and fraudulent (Del Vecchio v. Savelli, 10 Cal. App. 79, [101 Pac. 32]). Therefore we would have but little difficulty in sustaining the judgment if the evidence upon the whole case was sufficient to warrant the inference that the plaintiff relied upon and was in fact deceived by such representations. But the evidence will not justify any such inference. To the contrary the evidence clearly and without conflict shows that tfle plaintiff did not rely upon and was not deceived by the statement that the panorama had been earning twenty dollars per day while *121 owned and operated by the defendants. That this is so is shown by the plaintiff’s own testimony to the effect that, upon the payment of fifty dollars on account, he was given possession of the panorama, and during the three weeks following gave three exhibitions at the original stand “to see what it was earning.” The receipts of the first exhibition amounted to $12.50; the second exhibition a . week after brought but seventy-five cents to the box office; the receipts of the third exhibition given a week after the second amounted to but fifteen cents. Notwithstanding this actual demonstration of the real earning capacity of the panorama the plaintiff, without further representations of the defendants, completed the purchase by the payment of the balance of the price originally agreed upon. Surely under these circumstances, it cannot be said that the evidence shows that the plaintiff was justified in relying solely upon the representations of the defendants that the panorama had been earning twenty dollars per day.

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 899, 25 Cal. App. 117, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gratz-v-schuler-calctapp-1914.