Hickman v. Johnson

178 P. 145, 36 Cal. App. 342, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 461
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 21, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1780.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 178 P. 145 (Hickman v. Johnson) 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
Hickman v. Johnson, 178 P. 145, 36 Cal. App. 342, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 461 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This appeal is from the judgment decreeing the foreclosure of a mortgage and from the order denying the motion for a new trial.

The only complaint against the action of the court is based upon the order sustaining the demurrer to the amended cross-complaint and dismissing it from the files.

The action was brought upon several promissory notes for the sum of $24,075 and interest and for the foreclosure of a mortgage to secure the payment of the same. The notes provided that in case of a failure to pay the interest, as it became due, the payee might elect to consider the whole amount due and bring an action accordingly. «There is no controversy as to the failure of the defendant to make, the required . payments of interest. Indeed, the only payment made by him was the sum of about six thousand dollars on the selling price of $30,175, made at the time of the execution of the conveyance and of said promissory notes. The defense, however, upon which defendant relied, and still relies, is based upon *344 the claim of fraudulent representations made by the plaintiff. Involved therein are two elements or examples of fraudulent conduct. The first relates to a misrepresentation as to the ownership of a certain ditch, known as the “Dallas Ditch”; the second, to the failure of plaintiff to construct another ditch from the said Dallas Ditch to the land conveyed by plaintiff to defendant.

The material representation as to the Dallas Ditch which the defendant claims to have been fraudulent is as follows: “That as an inducement to enter into the said contract of purchase, that is to say, as an inducement to pay the said purchase price, execute the said notes and mortgage, and accept the said land, the said plaintiff, through its agents, officers, or representatives, represented to this defendant that it was able and entitled to grant to him the right to use the said Dallas Ditch referred to in said agreement, and that said Dallas Ditch was of sufficient size to irrigate all of the land entitled to be irrigated therefrom and more particularly the premises conveyed to this defendant, and that it carried at least twenty-seven second-feet of water. ’ ’

As seen,' this is not an express allegation that plaintiff represented that it owned the said Dallas Ditch. But we may accept it as a sufficient averment of that fact. This ownership is negatived in appropriate language, as is also the capacity of said Dallas Ditch to supply the needed water.

Again it is alleged: ‘ ‘ That at said time it was represented to this defendant, in said agreement of April 26th, that the said plaintiff would make an extension' of what is known as the Dallas Ditch, and that said extension would be brought west and flumed across the Ceres Canal on the west line of said land at a point north, and that said ditch and flume would be complete and ready for the conveyance of water therein by October 1, 1910. That all of said representations were false and fraudulent, and were known by the plaintiff and its agents to be false and fraudulent, and were made with the specific purpose of inducing this defendant to enter into the said transaction and agreement, and did so induce him. ’ ’

We may assume for the purposes of the case that said-representations were material, and that defendant had a right to and. did rely upon them. But it is apparent that an additional element must be shown in order to constitute a cause of action in behalf of defendant, and that is, that he *345 was damaged by said conduct of the plaintiff. If it appears from said cross-complaint that there is no sufficient allegation of facts to show that defendant was injured without his own fault by the conduct of plaintiff,—reprehensible as it might be,—then the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to said amended cross-complaint was entirely justified. It is claimed by respondent that such is the case and this consideration may invite inquiry.

We may first direct our attention to the injury, if any, caused by the plaintiff’s representations as to the ownership of said Dallas Ditch. It is apparent that there is no express allegation as to any appreciable damage done to the defendant by reason of the failure of the plaintiff to convey the ownership of said ditch. There is no averment as to what said ditch cost, or of its value, or what expense would be incurred in obtaining a substitute for it, nor how much the market value of the land would be affected by the question as to whether the said ditch was appurtenant thereto.

Indeed, in reference to both specifications of fraud it may be said that the allegations of damage are quite defective. We may notice them briefly.

The first is: “That said land without water is not worth to exceed twenty dollars per acre and is only valuable in ah amount greater because of the capacity or power of obtaining water, and if the said plaintiff fails to furnish the adequate means for irrigating said premises, then said premises not irrigated are not worth to exceed twenty dollars per acre. ’ ’

But, it is clear from the other allegations of the cross-complaint that plaintiff did not promise to furnish water to said lands, and it is quite apparent that the ownership of the Dallas Ditch is entirely distinct from the ownership of sufficient water to irrigate said premises.

Again, special damage is claimed in consequence of the money expended in planting a crop, and of the fact that the crop failed and perished for lack of water, and “that said failure to obtain said water was caused wholly by the failure of the plaintiff to furnish the defendant with the necessary ditches to convey the said water to his said land as agreed by it and hereinabove set forth.” The failure of said crop was placed at the sum of five thousand two hundred dollars, and the cost of putting in the crop at the sum of six hundred dollars, but it is apparent that this element of damage cannot *346 be considered for the reason that, according to the allegations of the cross-complaint, the defendant, before planting said crop, had complete knowledge that plaintiff did not own the said Dallas Ditch and could not therefore convey any interest in it to the defendant, and, also, that it had failed according to its agreement to complete an adequate connecting ditch, and, indeed, it further appears that the plaintiff had refused to make good its said representations. Therefore, if defendant, with knowledge of these facts and the failure of plaintiff to complete its agreement, planted a crop, incurring the cost thereof, and took a chance of having a crop without irrigation, it must be apparent that any loss thereby incurred must be chargeable to his own want of care, no matter how remiss might have been plaintiff in its conduct toward the defendant. Besides, it may be said as to the allegation in reference to the connecting ditches, that it was a promise to do something in the future, and, in order to state a cause of action for fraud, it must be alleged that said promise was made with the intention of deceiving or misleading the defendant.

There is no such allegation. It is not sufficient to allege that such promise was false and fraudulent. (Rheingans v. Smith, 161 Cal. 362, [Ann. Cas. 1913B, 1140, 119 Pac. 494].)

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Bluebook (online)
178 P. 145, 36 Cal. App. 342, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickman-v-johnson-calctapp-1918.