Gutterman v. Gally

21 P.2d 1000, 131 Cal. App. 647, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 829
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8521.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 1000 (Gutterman v. Gally) 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
Gutterman v. Gally, 21 P.2d 1000, 131 Cal. App. 647, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 829 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

SPENCE, J.

Plaintiff sought to recover damages alleged to have been sustained as the result of a conspiracy to defraud on the part of defendants. Defendants’ demurrers to plaintiff’s second amended complaint were sustained and a motion to strike was granted. Plaintiff was granted 'leave to amend, but declined to do so and judgment of dismissal was entered. From this judgment plaintiff appeals.

The second amended complaint covers twenty-five pages of the transcript and a similar amount of space is covered by the demur,rers and motion to strike. We do not believe it necessary, however, to set forth in detail all of the contents of these pleadings. The complaint relates the alleged circumstances surrounding plaintiff’s speculations in a mining stock during the speculative era of 1928. Among the defendants were certain brokers, the owner of a certain finan *649 cial weekly and the owner of a certain financial service which issued trading recommendations and special bulletins. Plaintiff was a subscriber to said financial weekly and said financial service. Plaintiff alleged that certain of the defendants acquired an option on 200,000 shares of the class A preferred stock of Central Eureka Mining Company at $1.25 per share and conspired to sell said stock by maintaining an artificial market therefor and to divide the proceeds; that they listed said stock on the San Francisco Mining Exchange in order to induce plaintiff and others to believe that the current price on'said exchange “had a reasonable and customary relation to the intrinsic value of such preferred stock” and for a period of time defendants created and maintained an “artificial market . . . thereby preventing the current market price of said preferred stock from bearing any relation whatever to the intrinsic value of said preferred stock”; that the opening sales were at a price of $2.50 per share and thereafter defendants caused the current market price to increase from time to time until it reached '$6.37% on September 21, 1928; that thereafter defendants withdrew from the market and permitted said stock to drop to $2 per share; that thereafter said stock continued to further decline and “is now worthless”; that defendants concealed from plaintiff the fact “that such price did not bear any relation whatever to the actual value of said preferred stock”; that defendants caused articles to be published in said financial weekly concerning the mining company which articles recommended the purchase of said stock at the current market price and “represented that said price was fair and reasonable and had a reasonable and customary relation to the intrinsic value of said preferred stock”; that defendants intended thereby to deceive plaintiff into believing that their advice was disinterested and that the current, market price wms “a fair price determined by the factors ordinarily affecting the market”; that defendants knew that said representations were false and fraudulent; that defendants concealed from plaintiff the fact that said current market price was “fraudulently fixed” and that all of said stock “except that currently sold” was owned by or under option to defendants; that defendants caused trading recommendations and special bulletins to be issued by said financial service recommending *650 that said stock be purchased and held, representing therein “that said market price was a.fair price and represented the intrinsic value of said preferred stock” and further represented that said current market price was “low” and was “a bargain”.

Plaintiff further alleged that he had “no knowledge whatever ... on which to determine whether or not the price of its preferred stock recommended by defendants represented the fair value thereof ’ ’; that he believed the representations of defendants and relying thereon, he made the following purchases of said stock at the “current market prices prevailing”: August 14, 1928, 500 shares at $3.70 per share; August 21, 1928, 2,000 shares at $3.95 per share, and September 5, 1928, 1,000 shares at $4.60 per share. It also appears from the allegations of the complaint that plaintiff thereafter made the following sales of said stock at the “current market price”: September 19, 1928, 500 shares at $5.30 per share, and “several days thereafter”, 100 shares at $5.92 per share. The prayer of the complaint was for the entire purchase price of all of the shares less the amount received by plaintiff through the profitable sales of some of the stock which he had purchased.

The demurrers were both general and special and the complaint was attacked for uncertainty in numerous particulars. As plaintiff declined to amend after said demurrers were sustained, it is well settled that he must stand upon his pleading and must show that the complaint was not subject to any of the objections specified in the demurrers. (Aalwyn v. Cobe, 168 Cal. 165 [142 Pac. 79]; Robinson v. Godfrey, 78 Cal. App. 284 [248 Pac. 268].) We shall not therefore discuss the many grounds of alleged uncertainty of the complaint, but will confine the discussion to one deficiency in the pleading which in our opinion made the alleged first cause of action stated in the complaint subject to defendants’ attack both by general demurrer and by special demurrer.

We may assume without deciding that the alleged misrepresentations set forth in the complaint might be sufficient under certain circumstances to be the basis of an action for damages for fraud, but other allegations would be required in order to show that plaintiff in fact had a cause of action. “It is fundamental, of course, that no *651 matter what the nature of the fraud or deceit, unless detriment has been occasioned thereby, plaintiff has no cause of action.” (Barron Estate Co. v. Woodruff Co., 163 Cal. 561, 571 [126 Pac. 351, 355, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 125].) In other words, in an action for damages based upon fraud, the allegations of the complaint must show that plaintiff has thereby suffered damage and no basis for damage could be shown in the present case in the absence of an allegation showing the actual value of the stock purchased. (12 Cal. Jur. 814, 815.) We search in vain for an allegation in the complaint showing the actual value of said stock. It is quite obvious that the figures in the complaint represented the “current market price” on the stock exchange as plaintiff himself alleges that these figures bore no relation to the “intrinsic value” of the stock. In fact he alleges that defendants prevented said “current market price of said preferred stock from bearing any relation whatever to the intrinsic value of said preferred stock”. The complaint is filled with such terms as “actual value”, “intrinsic value”, “fair price” and the like in the allegations with reference to the alleged misrepresentations, but no attempt is made to allege what was the “value”, “actual value”, “market value”, “intrinsic value” or “fair value” of said stock at any time. Experience has shown that the “current market price” of securities on the stock exchange is not always the same as the “actual value” or the “market value” thereof and it has been held that while the “current market price” may be some evidence of the “actual value” or “market value”, it is only evidence thereof. (Estate of Spitly, 124 Cal. App. 642 [13 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 1000, 131 Cal. App. 647, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gutterman-v-gally-calctapp-1933.