Hayter v. Fulmor

206 P.2d 1101, 92 Cal. App. 2d 392, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1704
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 1949
DocketCiv. 7613
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 206 P.2d 1101 (Hayter v. Fulmor) 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
Hayter v. Fulmor, 206 P.2d 1101, 92 Cal. App. 2d 392, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1704 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The defendant has appealed from a judgment of $2,106, which was rendered against her in a suit for damages for fraud exercised in procuring plaintiff to execute a written contract of employment as her agent to go to Alaska and sell properties to which she positively claimed title and ownership, when in fact she knew, or was charged with knowledge, that she did not own a substantial portion thereof. The contract required plaintiff to first sell the properties to which the defendant had no title before he was permitted to dis *394 pose of any of the other land. Relying upon such misrepresentations, plaintiff signed the contract and went to Alaska, incurring costs and expenses before he learned of the falsity of her statements regarding her ownership and title to the properties. He was precluded by the terms of the contract from disposing of any of the properties.

The record shows that plaintiff resides at Crescent City, California. The defendant lives at Eureka. Captain Albert Filmore, a cousin of the defendant, lived at Seldovia, Alaska. Prior to his death he filed on a government homestead, consisting of 160 acres of land in Sections 31 and 32, Township 8 South, Range 14 West, S. M. Alaska, which included lands claimed by a man by the name of Jones and another man by the name of Morris, both of which tracts the defendant positively told plaintiff she owned. It also included a portion of the townsite of Seldovia. Albert Filmore died February 13, 1919. By the terms of his will the 160-acre homestead tract was devised to the defendant. His estate was probated in Alaska. The final decree, which was rendered July 3, 1932, distributed to the defendant the homestead property. The defendant made final proof in the United States Land Office July 23,1930, on 91.86 acres only of said land. She previously relinquished her claim of title to Lots 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of Sec-ton 31 of that homestead property, which included a portion of the townsite of Seldovia. Her title to the balance of the 160-acre homestead, comprising 91.86 acres of land, was confirmed by the United States Land Office.

In -response to defendant’s advertisement for sale of her Alaska land, the plaintiff met her in the office of her attorney, Kenneth D. Sevier, at Eureka, about November 18, 1940, and discussed with them the proposition of his going to Alaska as her agent to sell the land. In response to the inquiry at the trial of this case as to whether she then told him she owned the entire tract of land in Sections 31 and 32, the plaintiff replied, “Absolutely, yes, sir.” He also testified that at no time did she tell him she had waived or relinquished title to any portion of the original 160-acre tract filed upon by her deceased cousin Albert Filmore. The record discloses the following testimony in that regard:

"Q. Now when Miss Fulmor made these representations to you with respect to which you have testified did she ever indicate to you. that the Albert Filmore application as originally made for homestead had been denied or changed in any way? A. She did not. Q. Did she ever mention the fact that she, as *395 Bertha Fulmor, had applied for a homestead? A. Yes, sir, Albert Filmore’s homestead. . . . Q. And did she ever state to you that she had relinquished any portion of the Albert Filmore homestead ? A. She never did. ...”

Yet the photostatic copy of the United States Land Office record shows that on “March 12, 1923, the entrywoman [Miss Fulmor] filed a relinquishment of all her right, title and interest to said Lots 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 Sec. 21.”

During plaintiff’s interview with the defendant he was shown maps and diagrams of Section's 31 and 32 of Township 8, in which the lands were located, and she pointed out the lots and parcels which she claimed to own. She said nothing to him of her previous relinquishment to portions of those properties. On the contrary, she led him to believe that she owned the entire Albert Filmore homestead tract.

As a result of their conference, the respective parties executed a written contract, November 18, 1940, by the terms of which the defendant employed plaintiff as her agent to sell all of her designated Alaska property, which she claimed she owned, in consideration of specified percentages of the proceeds of such sales, to be paid to plaintiff for his services. That contract provides in part:

“Whereas, the party of the first part is the owner of certain real property situated in the village of Seldovia, Seldovia Precinct, Third Division, Territory of Alaska. A portion of said property is in the possession of a Joe Jones who operates a pool room, bar room and dance hall. Another portion of said property is in the possession of a man named Morris who operates a store thereon.
“Either the portion now in the possession of the man named Morris or the portion in the possession of Joe Jones is to be sold first. . . .
“All the remaining property then owned by the party of the first part shall be sold as one parcel, and the party of the second part is to receive ten (10) percent of the net proceeds of said sale as compensation for his efforts in effecting same.
“The party of the second part is to make a search of the title to the property owned by the party of the first part, and if any steps are necessary toward clearing the same, he shall at once proceed to do so.at his own expense, it being understood that the fifty (50) percent allowed him upon the first sale *396 shall reimburse him for any moneys advanced by him for that purpose. ...”

Pursuant to said contract of employment, and in complete reliance upon said representations by defendant that she owned all of said land, the plaintiff went to Alaska, employed an attorney, interviewed the interested parties and investigated the public records of said land. He then discovered, arid so testified at the trial, that the “Joe Jones property,” which was one of the properties required to be first sold, was located on lot two of block thirty-four of the townsite of Seldovia, to which townsite the defendant had relinquished her claim of title. The townsite was not included in the United States patent to the 91.86-acre homestead tract to which the defendant received title in 1930. She had previously waived her claim to that Jones property, and failed to inform plaintiff of that fact.

With respect to the Morris property referred to in the contract, which is the other tract of land required to be first sold before other properties could be disposed of, the plaintiff testified that “The Morris residence is in the townsite.” The defendant had relinquished her claim of title to that portion of the townsite. There is evidence that the Morris store budding is situated across an alley upon the defendant’s 91.86-acre tract to which she was granted a patent. But it thus appears that at least a portion of the Morris property to which the defendant had relinquished her title did not belong to her. She failed to call plaintiff’s attention to that fact. The plaintiff also testified that he discovered that Morris held his property by a quitclaim deed from one Antqne Johanns.on, and that he had acquired title thereto by adverse possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 P.2d 1101, 92 Cal. App. 2d 392, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayter-v-fulmor-calctapp-1949.