Harold v. Pugh

345 P.2d 112, 174 Cal. App. 2d 603, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1744
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 21, 1959
DocketCiv. 22957
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 345 P.2d 112 (Harold v. Pugh) 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
Harold v. Pugh, 345 P.2d 112, 174 Cal. App. 2d 603, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1744 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

ASHBURN, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment for $14,950 compensatory damages and $1,500 exemplary damages awarded plaintiffs as a result of an egregious fraud practiced upon them by defendant. The case grows out of the same set of facts as People v. Pugh, 137 Cal.App.2d 226 [289 P.2d 826], wherein this court affirmed Pugh’s conviction of grand theft of real property of Keith Harold and his mother Verna B. Harold,—the same property and the same deal which are hereinafter discussed. Appellant advances 10 different grounds of reversal, none of which is meritorious.

Counsel has wholly failed to “demonstrate that there is no substantial evidence to support the challenged findings” as he is required to do upon appeal. (Nichols v. Mitchell, 32 Cal.2d 598, 600 [197 P.2d 550]; New v. New, 148 Cal.App.2d 372, 383 [306 P.2d 987].) The arguments proceed largely upon the assumption that the trial court was obligated to accept the testimony of defendant wherever uneontradicted, notwithstanding the judge’s conviction that he has been guilty of deliberate fraud. Of course, that is not the law. (People v. Pugh, supra, 137 Cal.App.2d 226, 233; Bechtold v. Bishop & Co., Inc., 16 Cal.2d 285, 291-292 [105 P.2d 984]; Nevarov v. Caldwell, 161 Cal.App.2d 762, 777 [327 P.2d 111]; Bazaure v. Richman, 169 Cal.App.2d 218, 221-222 [336 P.2d 1014]; Cicinelli v. Iwasaki, 170 Cal.App.2d 58, 68 [338 *607 P.2d 1005].) Our duty begins and ends with a determination whether there is substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, supporting any challenged finding. (Nichols v. Mitchell, supra, p. 600; New v. New, supra, p. 383.)

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to respondents, the factual situation appears to be as follows: Plaintiffs, Keith B. Harold and his mother, Verna Harold, were the owners of certain property known as 6200 State Street in Huntington Park. The legal title stood in the mother’s name, being held as security for a loan owing her by the son. They exchanged this property for $500 and a note and trust deed secured by a parcel of 304 acres of desert land in San Bernardino County. Defendant Elmer R Pugh was the real estate broker in the transaction. He had previously effected a sale of the desert land to Mrs. Mary Baker, a retired school teacher, who had paid him $300 and had executed a $15,000 note secured by a trust deed upon the property, which paper ran to Lulu Brockman, Pugh’s mother-in-law, who acted as a mere dummy for him. The trust deed represented purchase money and would not support a deficiency judgment (Code Civ. Proc., § 580b); Mrs. Baker had no assets with which to pay the installments of principal or interest.

Appellant induced plaintiffs to sell their home through the making of fraudulent representations as follows: That Pugh had an elderly woman client who owned a note secured by a deed of trust on certain alfalfa land in San Bernardino County; she would trade said paper for plaintiff’s home; said alfalfa land was located in Hinkley Valley and was worth $75 an acre as alfalfa land; the owner of the land was Mary Gregoria Baker, an elderly woman who owned an alfalfa farm close to the subject property; she also owned several pieces of income property in the Westlake Park district (of Los Angeles); she was well able to develop the property and had the necessary knowledge so to do; she had two sons-in-law that were to farm the land subject to the trust deed; she was also an executive and owner of a plastic concern; also that the deed of trust was readily salable at face value and defendant was not making one penny from the deal.

Upon substantial and sufficient evidence the court found with respect to these representations that they were wholly and in every respect false; also that the relationship between Lulu Brockman and Pugh was never disclosed; that said 304 acres subject to the trust deed was not valuable land, not *608 alfalfa land or suitable for agricultural purposes at all; it was not worth $75 an acre but was worth the sum of one dollar per acre; “ [t]hat said deed of trust was not then and is not now a valuable security, nor is the said deed of trust readily salable at its full face value or in any other sum in excess of $304.00. The said Elmer R. Pugh was deriving and did derive a secret benefit from the transaction and that he has received the entire consideration from the plaintiffs herein, viz-, the value of their home located at 6200 State Street, Huntington Park, California, for which plaintiffs paid $15,-750.00 and the reasonable market value of which at all times herein mentioned was $15,750.00.” In exchange for their home plaintiffs received the sum of $500 and said note and trust deed of the then market value of $304, nothing else. This State Street property went to appellant’s dummy, Lulu Brockman, later to his daughter Mary Lucille Pugh, and when it was sold appellant received the proceeds. Deducting $800 from the value of plaintiffs’ home the court found they had been damaged in the amount of $14,950, to which it added $1,500 as a punitive award for a fraud which had been perpetrated maliciously.

Appellant argues first that the amended complaint (which sounds in damages and not rescission) did not state a cause of action because there was no averment that plaintiffs had exhausted their security under a power of sale contained in the trust deed. The point is frivolous and the cases cited do not support it in any manner or degree.

Under the caption, “The Findings are contrary to the law and the evidence,” appellant’s counsel attacks various findings as unsupported and to that end relies upon assertions as to what the evidence proves, without furnishing transcript references, or relies upon evidence favorable to defendant’s contentions which is contradicted by other evidence that the court accepted as true.

The claim that no representation was made to Verna Harold because “ [t]here is no evidence that the [defendant] ever had any direct contact with or made any representations to Verna Harold” rests upon no solid basis. It is settled law that “a representation made to one person with the intention that it shall reach the ears of another and be acted on by him, and which does reach him and is acted on by him to his injury, gives him the same right as if it had been made to him directly.” (23 Cal.Jur.2d, § 32, p. 78.) That is the situation at bar. Representations made to the son were *609 communicated by him to the mother, as obviously was intended. See, in this connection, People v. Pugh, supra, 137 Cal.App.2d 226, 233-234.

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Bluebook (online)
345 P.2d 112, 174 Cal. App. 2d 603, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-v-pugh-calctapp-1959.