J. P. Armstrong v. Adams

283 P. 871, 102 Cal. App. 677, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 148
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 1929
DocketDocket No. 35.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 283 P. 871 (J. P. Armstrong v. Adams) 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
J. P. Armstrong v. Adams, 283 P. 871, 102 Cal. App. 677, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 148 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

SLOANE, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal upon failure and refusal of plaintiffs to amend, after sustaining demurrer to their third amended complaint.

The present action was brought by plaintiffs against the defendant for damages resulting from alleged culpable negligence of defendant, as their attorney, in preparing findings in support of a judgment in favor of plaintiffs in an action to recover damages for deceit and failure of consideration in a real estate transaction.

It is alleged in the complaint in the present action that plaintiffs employed defendant to represent them and to *679 prosecute an action to recover damages from Walter F. Rau and Mary Rau, arising on a transaction effecting an exchange of properties; that the property received by the plaintiffs here in such exchange consisted of an orange grove and improvements thereon, situated in the county of San Bernardino; that this property was accepted in the exchange transaction on the representation that it contained 55 acres; that it was disclosed after the deal had been consummated that it only contained 44.59 acres.

That an action for damages to recover the difference in value between the property as conveyed and its value, had it contained the 55 acres as represented, was instituted against the Raus in the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. That the case was tried before the court without a jury, and proof introduced in behalf of plaintiffs that the property in question was worth $9,360 less than it would have been had it contained 55 acres as was represented, and that the court at the conclusion of the trial announced its judgment for the plaintiffs in said sum, and directed defendant here, the attorney for the plaintiffs, to prepare findings; that proposed-findings were drawn up by plaintiffs’ said attorney, and accepted and adopted by the court, but that said -findings, as thus prepared and adopted, instead of stating that the property in question, had it contained 55 acres as represented would be worth $9,360 more than it was worth with an acreage of only 44.59 acres, stated “that had said property embraced 55 acres, instead of 44.59 acres, the value thereof would be $9,360.00”; and that no statement of the difference in value between the property as conveyed, and as represented, was contained in the findings; that the defendants in said action appealed therefrom on the judgment-roll alone, and that on such appeal to the District Court of Appeal the judgment was reversed.

The original judgment is alleged to have been made and entered about October 7, 1922, and the judgment of reversal about April 15, 1925. The complaint also alleges that the defendant attorney wilfully, knowingly and with an intent to conceal his negligence in preparing said findings, withheld all information of the fatal omission therein, and that plaintiffs had no notice or knowledge thereof until after the judgment of reversal in the court of appeal.

*680 The complaint states that the defect in the findings was the ground on which the court of appeal reversed the judgment. It is apparent that the findings in question were insufficient to support the judgment, and, as a matter of fact, the opinion of the court of appeal, as reported in 72 Cal. App. 288 [236 Pac. 937], shows conclusively that -the judgment of reversal was based on the insufficiency of the findings. The court says: “It is perfectly clear that the facts as found furnish no basis whatever for damages in the sum stated, or in any amount.”

Under the new section 956a of the Code of Civil Procedure and section 4% of article VI of the Constitution, these defects of the findings could be cured by the appellate court, but as the law. then stood, and as is pointed out in the opinion, the appellate court was without authority to amend the findings, or to disregard the conclusiveness of the record as presented. No attempt seems to have been taken at any step in the proceedings to correct the error, and it does not appear whether a new trial was ever had or a recovery obtained from the defendants in that action for the damages sustained in the property exchange.

Plaintiffs’ action in the present case is for damages and injuries, consequences alleged to have resulted from the negligence of plaintiffs’ attorney in drafting these findings and in concealing and withholding from plaintiffs knowledge of the fatal omissions.

The complaint contains four alleged causes of action.

The first demands damages on account of the loss of interest on the judgment against the Raus, from the date of its entry, to the date of its reversal, in the sum of $2,430, and costs, which loss is alleged to have been the direct and proximate result of defendant’s negligence in preparing the findings.

The second cause of action asks for the cancellation of a note and mortgage given by plaintiffs to defendant in consideration of the attorney’s services, consisting in a large part of the services alleged to have been rendered valueless by the defective findings.

The third cause of action demands the cancellation of said note and mortgage under allegations that the plaintiffs were induced to execute them under the belief entertained by plaintiffs and created by the wilful and fraudulent with *681 holding of information as to the insufficiency of the findings in question, to sustain plaintiffs’ judgment for damages and the consequent failure of consideration for the note and mortgage, based on defendant’s claim for legal services.

The fourth cause of action seeks the cancellation of the same note and mortgage by reason of alleged undue influence of defendant as the confidential attorney and advisor of plaintiffs, and their reliance on his integrity and good faith.

A general demurrer was filed by defendant to each and all of these causes of action, on the ground that neither of them or all of them together stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against defendant, and also demurring specially to eatih cause of action on the grounds of uncertainty, ambiguity and unintelligibility, and further alleging a misjoinder of causes of action.

The demurrer to the complaint, which was plaintiffs’ third amended complaint, was sustained in its entirety, and plaintiffs refusing and failing to further amend, the judgment of dismissal from which this appeal was taken was made and entered.

The correctness of the judgment of dismissal depends on whether or not either of the alleged causes of action is sufficiently pleaded. Respondent concedes the rule that if any count or cause of action in a complaint setting up several counts or causes of action is good as against demurrer, that a -judgment of dismissal for insufficiency of the complaint cannot be sustained. (Jensen v. Dorr, 159 Cal. 742 [116 Pac. 553]; Brandt v. Brandt, 178 Cal. 548 [174 Pac. 55]; Jones v. Iverson, 131 Cal. 101 [63 Pac. 135]; Etchas v. Orena, 127 Cal. 588 [60 Pac. 45].)

Respondent calls attention to the fact that all of the decisions cited referred to rulings on general demurrer.

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Bluebook (online)
283 P. 871, 102 Cal. App. 677, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-p-armstrong-v-adams-calctapp-1929.