Hart v. Ed-Ley Corp.
This text of 482 P.2d 421 (Hart v. Ed-Ley Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Dr. G. Phillip HART, Jr., and Nell Hearn Hart, Plaintiffs in Error,
v.
ED-LEY CORP., a corporation, Gladys M. Edwards, Jack Braden, Market Exchange, Inc., a corporation, Midland Federal Savings and Loan Association, a corporation, Guy P. Colantino, as Receiver, and Commercial Industrial Bank, a corporation, Defendants in Error.
Colorado Court of Appeals, Div. I.
*422 C. J. Berardini, Denver, for plaintiffs in error.
S. T. Anderson, Denver, for defendants in error, Ed-Ley Corp., Gladys M. Edwards, Jack Braden, and Market Exchange, Inc.
Fairfield & Woods, Charles E. Matheson, Denver, for defendant in error, Midland Federal Savings and Loan Assn.
C. Hamilton Evans, Denver, for defendants in error, Guy P. Colantino, as Receiver, and Commercial Industrial Bank.
Not Selected for Official Publication.
COYTE, Judge.
This case was originally filed in the Supreme Court of the State of Colorado and subsequently transferred to the Court of Appeals under authority vested in the Supreme Court.
The parties make their appearance here in the same order as they appeared at trial and shall be referred to in the same manner or by name.
Plaintiffs contracted to exchange property with defendant Ed-Ley Corp. The motel which plaintiffs were to receive in the exchange was located in Denver, Colorado, and had an agreed value of $250,000. The owner and seller of the motel was the defendant Ed-Ley Corp. of which the defendant Gladys Edwards was president. The defendant Jack Braden was the real estate agent who handled this exchange, and the defendant Market Exchange, Inc., was the listing agency and the party that employed Braden. Suit was brought against these defendants in January 1967 for damages allegedly sustained as a result of fraudulent misrepresentation as to the motel's earning capacity, or in the alternative for rescission of the contract.
The defendants, Midland Federal Savings and Loan, hereafter referred to as "Midland," and Commercial Industrial Bank, hereinafter referred to as "Commercial," were the respective holders of the first and second deeds of trust on the property. The defendant Guy P. Colantino was the payee of the second deed of trust, which he had assigned to the defendant Commercial. Plaintiff sought a restraining order prohibiting the latter three defendants from commencing foreclosure proceedings pending the outcome of the claim for damages or rescission against the other defendants.
In June 1967 the defendant Colantino, at plaintiffs' request, was appointed receiver of the motel property and functioned as such until December 1967. Plaintiffs' request for an order restraining the defendants Midland and Commercial from commencing foreclosure proceedings on their deeds of trust was denied.
Prior to the trial, the judge ordered the plaintiffs to elect their remedy, and they chose damages. Thereafter, in August 1967, trial was to the court, which granted defendants' motion to dismiss at the close of plaintiffs' evidence
In December 1967 the court entered an order discharging the receiver. By the terms of this order, the court ordered the *423 receiver to distribute $10,030.21 in his possession as follows: (1) $750 as receiver's fees; (2) $3,415.74 for the April and May of 1967 payment on the deed of trust held by Midland; (3) $532.06 for attorney's fees; (4) $4,614.75 to the defendant Colantino for reimbursement of sums paid to Midland for the January, February, and March 1967 payments on the deed of trust; and (5) $717.66 to Commercial for the arrearage on the second deed of trust.
Plaintiffs appeal, asserting various items of error were committed by the trial court below.
I.
The first contention concerns the findings made by the trial court. To understand this alleged error it is necessary to explain the specific allegations of fraud made by the plaintiffs.
The negotiations concerning the sale of this motel took place in August 1966. According to plaintiff, Dr. Hart, he discussed the exchange with the defendant Braden, emphasizing that he wished to purchase income-producing property.
A financial statement prepared by an accountant for the information of the defendant Gladys Edwards, was submitted to the plaintiff, Dr. Hart, upon his request. Dr. Hart gave this financial statement to his accountant to look over before the purchase.
This particular statement had a column listing the income and expenses for the month of August 1966 and a parallel column purporting to list the accrual of income and expenses for the year to date. The total gross income for August was listed as $10,085 and for the year to date as $50,095.66. Under the various expenses, interest for August was listed as $1,019.66, and for the year to date as $12,505.98. Insurance was listed as zero for August and $254.67 for the year to date. Taxes (meaning property taxes) were listed as being zero for August and $442.93 for the year to date. These expenses, totaled with the others and subtracted from the gross income, gave a net profit for the year to date as $4,614.38.
According to the plaintiff, however, the correct figures for the year should have been $1,015.22 for insurance, $13,184.60 for interest and $3,578.01 for taxes. This was a net discrepancy of $4,574.25, meaning that the net income was only $40.14 instead of the $4,614.38 shown. Apparently plaintiffs' figures were correct for we note that these figures were used in the closing statement dated October of 1966.
The trial court held that even though the financial statement was false, it was not an actionable case of fraud since the financial statement was not known to be false by the defendant Gladys Edwards when it was submitted to Dr. Hart; and since, in order to prove fraud, it must be established that the seller had knowledge that the representation made is in fact false, Morrison v. Goodspeed, 100 Colo. 470, 68 P.2d 458. The court concluded that there was a failure of proof on the part of plaintiffs and dismissed this suit.
We are in agreement with plaintiffs' argument that Gladys Edwards had actual knowledge that these figures were false. The evidence is clear that the true figures were in possession of the corporation, i.e., contained within its records, but were incorrectly stated in the financial statement.
In brief, fraud requires the seller to misrepresent or conceal a material fact from the purchaser in a deliberate or reckless manner, with the intent that the purchaser rely upon this misrepresentation. The purchaser must be in ignorance of this material fact, and act in justifiable reliance upon this misrepresentation to his detriment. Knight v. Cantrell, 154 Colo. 396, 390 P.2d 948; Morrison v. Goodspeed, supra. In order to prove fraud, it is necessary to establish the presence of all the elements by clear and convincing proof. Greathouse v. Jones, 167 Colo. 406, 447 P. 2d 985.
The facts and circumstances surrounding this transaction simply would not support such a finding. In particular, we *424 note from Dr. Hart's testimony that he had dealt in real estate for investment purposes for fifteen years preceding this transaction. Before this purchase, he had consulted both an accountant and an attorney. The evidence reveals Dr. Hart is a man knowledgeable and well informed concerning real estate transactions.
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482 P.2d 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-ed-ley-corp-coloctapp-1971.