Hiltpold v. Stern

82 A.2d 123, 26 A.L.R. 2d 852, 1951 D.C. App. LEXIS 183
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1951
Docket1067
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 A.2d 123 (Hiltpold v. Stern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hiltpold v. Stern, 82 A.2d 123, 26 A.L.R. 2d 852, 1951 D.C. App. LEXIS 183 (D.C. 1951).

Opinion

CLAGETT, Associate Judge.

Elizabeth A. Stern signed a sales contract for the purchase of a lot owned by defendants. Alleging that she was induced to sign this contract in 1946 by the fraudulent misrepresentations of defendant Harold Hiltpold, she brought this action in 1949 1 to recover certain payments she had made totaling $1,560 and to cancel the contract. 2 The action was tried without a jury. The court in a memorandum opinion found for the plaintiff and entered judgment for the amount claimed plus interest and costs. Defendants appeal.

Miss Stern is a middle-aged woman employed by a Government agency. She lived on the same bus route as defendant Harold Hiltpold and became acquainted with him in January 1946 while riding back and forth to work. Hiltpold himself worked for the Government and was also a licensed real estate salesman. Plaintiff testified that after several meetings on the bus she and Hiltpold became quite friendly. On one occasion, he asked her if she had any money to invest. On learning she 'had some money invested in Government ‘bonds he advised her to invest her money in vacant land and asked her to come out and see some lots owned by himself and wife.

In the latter part of January, plaintiff went out to view the lots located near the Potomac River near the District line in the northwestern section of the city. They are adjoining lots and are described as lots 21, 22, and 36 in square 1452. Lot 21 is a corner lot and lot 22 is situated between lot 21 and lot 36. The selling price was stated by Hiltpold to be $5,500 for lot 21 and $4,500 each for lots 22 and 36. It was lot 36 that Hiltpold especially pointed out to the plaintiff. She testified that they walked over lots 21 and 22 and partially over lot 36, that she noticed a “depression”' in the rear of lot 36 and inquired of Hilt-pold, “Will it make any difference being the land is low?” and that he replied, “No, that doesn’t matter much. They can fill that in. The main thing is the view.” Hiltpold estimated that the lot could be filled in for $900.

Several days later plaintiff informed Hiltpold that she would buy lot 36. They agreed that the price would be $3,600. The parties met at a downtown bank and, according to the testimony of the plaintiff, she cashed some war bonds and gave Hilt-pold $800 in cash. Five days later, on January 9, 1946, they signed a sales con *125 tract providing for the $800 down payment and a $2,800 note payable $30 a month. This note was not secured nor was there any provision for interest. Apparently, when the amount was paid, plaintiff was to get a deed to the land. Plaintiff thereafter made two monthly payments and in January 1947 she made a payment of $700.

Plaintiff testified that she bought the lot because Hiltpold promised that he would sell it for her at a profit. She also testified that prior to her viewing the lots defendant visited her at her apartment and demonstrated by figures how if she would buy one of his lots for $4,500, making a down payment of $1,000, he could resell it for her for $6,500, and thereby bring her a profit of over $1,000. Her further testimony was that she would not have contracted to buy the lot but for defendant’s assurance that he could and would resell it for her at a profit and that she had not consulted anyone else but 'had relied exclusively on defendant’s advice; that she trusted him implicitly. She communicated with him several times during 1946 and repeatedly asked him when he was going to sell the lot. He assured her that he had certain prospective buyers but that nothing had materialized. Finally, on February 7, 1949, she filed this action to rescind the contract and recover the monies that she had paid.

Lot 36, which plaintiff agreed to buy, was described by an expert real estate appraiser, who appeared as a witness for plaintiff, as follows: It has a frontage of 50 feet on the sidewalk line and is irregular in shape though tending to be rectangular. On its north line it is 129 feet deep and on its south line 105 feet deep containing in all 6,617 square feet of ground. A portion of the front of the lot is level with the sidewalk for a distance back of about ten to twelve feet and then drops “precipitously” 35 feet. At the bottom of this drop there is a perennial stream which runs the entire length of the property and passes off of the lot through a culvert under Potomac Avenue. An open District storm sewer also runs through the property. The remaining portion of the front of the lot is not level. The expert testified that there was approximately 200 square feet which he said constituted all of the building area of the lot. The zoning regulations for that area require single-family detached dwellings. When asked if such a dwelling could be built on the lot the expert answered that it could not; that it would not be feasible and would be entirely impractical to attempt to fill the depression for the purposes of building. He estimated the value of the lot to be between $250 and $275. .This was substantially corroborated by- another expert witness for the plaintiff. His estimate of the value of the lot was $400. Defendants’ own expert 'appraiser estimated the lot to have a value of $950.

During the course of trial evidence was admitted over objection of the defendants that an oral compromise agreement was entered into between the parties in July 1950. The terms of this settlement were that defendants would return $1,300 to plaintiff by paying $500 in cash and giving a $800 note payable in 18 monthly installments. Evidence of this oral agreement was established by the testimony of Miss Stern and by the testimony of an attorney who had previously represented defendants who told of certain offers and counteroffers made by the parties in June and July of 1950 and how the oral settlement was finally reached. Defendant himself testified to the same effect. However, the payments were never made and this attorney withdrew before trial. This testimony of the former attorney was objected to by the defendants on the ground that it involved privileged communications between attorney and client.

The trial judge in his memorandum opinion found that plaintiff was induced to enter into the contract by defendant Harold Hiltpold’s promise that he .would resell the lot for her at a profit and that after the contract of sale was signed he continued to promise to sell the property. He found that she had never bought or sold any other' real estate and that she was inexperienced in the field of investments. The trial court also found that the contract was an “unconscionable agreement which is repulsively fraudulent.”

*126 We think there was ample evidence to support the findings and conclusions of the trial judge in this case. Harold Hiltpold was a licensed real estate salesman. He won the friendship and confidence of plaintiff, an inexperienced woman, before he sold her the lot, and promised her that if she would buy one of the lots he could and would resell it for her at a large profit, The general rule is that fraud cannot be predicated, upon statements promissory in nature and relating to future actions. But that a purchaser, induced by false representations to buy property, may rescind and 'sue for the consideration paid is well established. 3

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Bluebook (online)
82 A.2d 123, 26 A.L.R. 2d 852, 1951 D.C. App. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hiltpold-v-stern-dc-1951.