Holcomb v. Long Beach Investment Co.

19 P.2d 31, 129 Cal. App. 285, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1172
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1933
DocketDocket No. 4724.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 19 P.2d 31 (Holcomb v. Long Beach Investment Co.) 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
Holcomb v. Long Beach Investment Co., 19 P.2d 31, 129 Cal. App. 285, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1172 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

THOMPSON (R. L.), J.

The respondents recovered judgment for damages in accordance with the verdict of a jury for fraud exercised by the appellants in an exchange of properties. It is conceded there is a conflict of evidence respecting the proof of fraud. The appellants seek a reversal of the judgment on the grounds of alleged error in the reception and exclusion of evidence at the trial, and in the giving and refusing of instructions to the jury. The appellants also contend the- conduct of the respondents subsequent to the discovery of the alleged misrepresentations accomplished a waiver of the fraud and a ratification of the terms of the exchange.

The Long Beach Investment Company, a corporation, was the owner of Alta Vista Court apartments situated at Long Beach, including the furniture with which it was equipped. There is evidence indicating this property was worth ap *288 proximately $30,000. It was subject to a first mortgage of $23,000 and a second trust deed of $10,000. The defendant Henderson was a stockholder and president of the corporation. The defendant Jasper was a stockholder and vice-president of the corporation. The plaintiffs were owners of 100 acres of land in San Bernardino County called the Chino ranch, which was valued at the sum of $65,000 and was subject to a mortgage of $25,000. C. E. Holcomb is the husband of the plaintiff, Minnie Holcomb. The plaintiffs are sisters. Holcomb acted as their agent. The defendant Henderson and Mr. and Mrs. Holcomb had been intimate acquaintances and members of the same fraternal lodge for many years. The respondents were elderly ladies possessing small business experience and no knowledge of real estate values at Long Beach. In February, 1925, the defendant Henderson had dinner with the respondents at their home in Anaheim. He was familiar with the Chino ranch, having previously negotiated a loan of $25,000 for them, secured by a mortgage on the ranch. He then suggested an exchange of this ranch for the Alta Vista Court apartments which he told them belonged to C. J. Jasper of Oakland and was worth $78,000. He declared that the income from the apartments amounted to $500 a month. The respondents were then told the apartments were subject to a first mortgage of $23',000 and an additional indebtedness of $10,000 represented by an unrecorded trust deed. There is evidence indicating that the apartments cost the defendant corporation only $30,000 a short time before the exchange was negotiated. The income from the property did not exceed three or four hundred dollars a month. The existence of the $10,000 trust deed is' questionable.

Henderson subsequently sent his associate Jasper to negotiate the exchange. Jasper acted as the agent for the respondents. A written agreement of exchange of properties was signed by the respondents and by Jasper, the purported owner of the apartments on February 27, 1925. The exchange was consummated the following month, and the respondents took possession of the apartments in April. The Alta Vista Court apartments were acquired by the respondents subject to the first mortgage of $23,000 and the unrecorded trust deed purporting to secure an *289 indebtedness of $10,000. A new trust deed for this sum of $10,000 was executed to the defendants.

A few months after the exchange of properties was consummated, Henderson began to urge the respondents to pay this $10,000 indebtedness. Regarding this demand, Mr. Holcomb testified: “Mr. Henderson . . . told me that they were very hard pressed for money and asked me if I couldn’t arrange to take up the trust deed of ten thousand dollars.” He suggested that the respondents arrange to refinance their mortgage indebtedness and secure a new loan. In the effort to do this the respondents first discovered the fraud which had been practiced upon them in procuring the exchange. They made an application to the Farm and Home Loan Association, of which corporation R. N. Burgess was president and manager, for the money with which to refinance the encumbrance on their property. An officer from the State Building and Loan Association appraised the property and informed them it was greatly overvalued and that it had cost the defendant corporation only $30,000. In the investigation which followed, the respondents discovered the fraud with which they had been victimized. They first consulted the district attorney with the purpose of instigating criminal prosecution against the individual defendants. This suit for damages was subsequently instituted. The cause was tried with a jury. A verdict of $45,000 damages was rendered against each of the defendants. A judgment for that amount was accordingly entered. From that judgment the defendants have appealed.

The appellants concede that a conflict of evidence exists regarding the amount of damages and the exercise of fraud in procuring the exchange of properties. In their opening brief it is said: “Appellants are not insisting that there was not a conflict of evidence upon the question of the alleged fraud and misrepresentations chargeable to appellants. ... On the contrary, we assert that there was a conflict of evidence upon the questions, which reflected upon the alleged misrepresented value of the Alta Vista Apartments, as well as upon the question of the amount of respondents’ damages.” This concession is in accordance with the record. The court is therefore bound to hold under the well-established rule on appeal, that the judg *290 rnent is adequately supported by evidence of the alleged fraud, and that the amount of the judgment is not excessive.

The appellants assert that the respondents waived their claim for damages for fraud and ratified the exchange of properties by signing a written agreement to that effect after they had discovered the fraud and were fully informed concerning the entire transaction. This waiver is alleged in the answer as a special defense.

We are of the opinion the agreement to waive defendants’ liability for fraud is nudum pactum and void for failure of consideration and fraud which was exercised in procuring its execution. It is therefore not a valid defense to this action. It appears that Burgess, the president of the Farm and Home Loan Association, from which respondents sought to procure the loan, conspired with the defendant Henderson to procure the release. Burgess knew of the terms of exchange of properties between the defendants and respondents. He knew of the alleged fraud and the threatened prosecution therefor. In negotiating the proposed loan to the respondents, Burgess was in consultation with Henderson regarding the terms thereof. This was in the fall of 1925. The respondents endeavored to borrow $41,000. This was necessary to cover the entire indebtedness on the apartments, including the first mortgage of $23,000, the sum of $10,000 secured by the trust deed, and a subsequent third mortgage securing the further loan of $5,200, together with accumulated interest on these sums and $1600 commissions demanded by Burgess. After conferring with Henderson, Mr. Burgess offered to purchase the Alta Vista Court property for $56,000. He agreed to pay this purchase price by assuming the entire indebtedness of $41,000 and issuing to the respondents “gold bonds” of the Farm and Home Loan Association for the further sum of $15,000. Burgess represented that these bonds were worth their face value and that they were secured by property worth three times their value.

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Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 31, 129 Cal. App. 285, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-v-long-beach-investment-co-calctapp-1933.