Jensen v. Jones Miller, Inc.

128 P.2d 110, 53 Cal. App. 2d 467, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 506
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 20, 1942
DocketCiv. No. 13535
StatusPublished

This text of 128 P.2d 110 (Jensen v. Jones Miller, Inc.) 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
Jensen v. Jones Miller, Inc., 128 P.2d 110, 53 Cal. App. 2d 467, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 506 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

This is an action by a principal against her brokers to recover secret profits and commissions paid upon a sale of real estate. By her complaint plaintiff alleged that on or about June 20, 1939, she and her co-trustee authorized defendants Jones Miller, Inc., Ltd., and Harry Miller, as brokers, to procure a purchaser for certain described real property at a minimum price of $35,000 or such higher price as said defendants might obtain, and orally agreed that in the event that such purchaser was procured through the efforts of the named defendants, the latter would be paid a commission of five per cent of the amount of the agreed selling price. That thereafter, on or about July 15, 1939, defendants just named employed defendant L. L. Hullet to assist them in finding a purchaser for said real property and agreed with said defendant Hullet that in the event he should procure a purchaser he would receive as commission for his services the entire amount of the selling price of the property in excess of $34,125. The complaint further charged that defendants did not at any time report to plaintiff or her co-trustee the employment of said Hullet and that she and her co-trustee had no knowledge of the employment or the terms thereof, and that such employment was wholly without authority from plaintiff or her co-trustee. It was then alleged that on July 24, 1939, defendant Hullet procured one Jennie Grawoig as a purchaser of the property at an agreed price of $36,000 and obtained from said Jennie Grawoig a deposit [469]*469of $1,000 on the purchase price; that on the same day defendants placed the transaction in escrow. The complaint further charged that defendants did not ever report to plaintiff or her co-trustee the sale to said Jennie Grawoig, but that on the contrary the defendants “deliberately and with intent and purpose to deceive and to defraud plaintiff and her co-trustee, concealed and withheld from said trustees all knowledge and information relative to said sale to said Jennie Grawoig at and for said price of $36,000.”

Plaintiff further alleged in her complaint that in furtherance of the alleged plan and scheme to deceive her and her co-trustee and to conceal from them the sale to Jennie Grawoig, the defendants caused one Charles B. Grimes and Wilma Grimes, his wife, to be named as vendors of the property in escrow and caused to be opened another escrow wherein plaintiff and her co-trustees were named as vendors of the property and the Grimes’ named as vendees at a sale price of $35,000. Then followed allegations that no report of such proceedings was ever made by defendants to plaintiff or her co-trustee, and that neither they nor the Grimes’ had ever been consulted or had any knowledge of said escrow or the use of their names therein. The complaint then charged that on July 28, 1939, without disclosing to plaintiff or her co-trustee any information whatever relative to any pending sale to Jennie Grawoig, defendants “falsely and fraudulently reported to plaintiff and to her co-trustee that they had procured a buyer for the above described property, to wit, one Charles E. Grimes, at a price of $35,000; that said sum of $35,000 was the best price they could obtain for the property, and the best price for which it could be sold under prevailing conditions”; that at the time this last mentioned information was transmitted to plaintiff and her co-trustee the defendants “well knew that said Grimes was not the purchaser of said property, at any price; that he was a mere ‘dummy’ being used by defendants in furtherance of their scheme to conceal from their principals” (plaintiff and her co-trustee) “all knowledge of the proposed sale of the property to Jennie Grawoig at a price of $36,000, and said defendants well knew that the simulated sale to Grimes . . . was solely for the purpose of placing the title to the property in Grimes to be immediately deeded to Jennie Grawoig.”

By her complaint plaintiff further alleged that relying upon the representations of defendants that Charles B. [470]*470Grimes was the buyer of the property and that the sum of $35,000 was the best price for which the property could be sold, plaintiff and her co-trustee accepted and approved the sale upon the terms and conditions aforesaid and executed their deed to said property in favor of said Grimes. It was further alleged that the intent and purpose of defendants’ activities in the use of the two escrows was to enable them to collect and obtain for themselves, and that they did collect and retain, in addition to the regular commission of five per cent, the difference between the amounts of the respective selling prices of the two sales, to wit, the sum of $1,000. In the prayer of her complaint plaintiff asked that defendants be required to account to her for the selling price of the property; that she have judgment against defendants for the sum of $1,750 paid to them as commission and for the sum of $1,000 allegedly taken and retained without authority by defendants out of the “true selling price of the property.”

Defendants Jones Miller, Inc., Ltd., and Harry Miller filed an answer denying that they or either of them entered into any plan or scheme of concealment as charged in the complaint, or that the sale to Grimes was a simulated sale, or that they ever made any sale of the property in question to Jennie Grawoig for the price of $36,000 or any other price. These answering defendants also denied participation in any double escrow as alleged in the complaint or any double escrow for the purpose of obtaining a sum greater than the sum of $1,750 which they claimed was due them as a commission pursuant to their agreement with plaintiff and her co-trustee. These defendants specifically denied that they obtained any secret profit or any portion of the sum of $1,000 received in excess of the agreed sale price of $35,000.

The defendant Hullet filed a separate answer in which he denied participation in any scheme or plan for the purpose of defrauding plaintiff and alleged that he acted in good faith and made no concealments, statements or representations to any parties in connection with the transaction other than as was reflected in the escrows through which the transactions were consummated.

The cause was tried before the court sitting without a jury and resulted in a judgment for the defendants, from which judgment plaintiff prosecutes this appeal. No reporter’s transcript has been filed, and this appeal comes before us on the judgment roll alone. Following trial of the action [471]*471the judge presiding thereat wrote a “memorandum for judgment,” apparently for the purpose of assisting counsel in the preparation of findings and the framing of a judgment. The clerk included this memorandum among the documents contained in the purported judgment roll. We are invited by appellant to consider the findings of the court in the light of the aforesaid memorandum of the trial judge, it being contended that such memorandum becomes a part of the record by reason of the provisions of section 953 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1919, and particularly the following language appearing therein:

“. . . If it appears that there is any paper or record in the custody of the clerk of the trial court which was before the trial court

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 P.2d 110, 53 Cal. App. 2d 467, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-jones-miller-inc-calctapp-1942.