Kleist v. Priem

196 P. 72, 51 Cal. App. 32, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 664
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 6, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3638.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 196 P. 72 (Kleist v. Priem) 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
Kleist v. Priem, 196 P. 72, 51 Cal. App. 32, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 664 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

*34 SEAWELL, P. J., pro tem.

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, brought this action against defendants, husband and wife, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the former in the sum of $11,360 as the result of an exchange of real properties by and between said parties induced by false and fraudulent representations made by defendant B. E. Priem, acting for himself and his said wife. The wives of the parties were made parties solely because of respective marital relations. This being so, reference will be made only to the principals.

The property parted with by plaintiff is situated in Douglas County, Oregon, and will be referred to as the Oregon property, while the property received by him from defendant, consisting of several lots, parcels, and tracts of land situate in the counties of San Francisco, Alameda, San Mateo, Contra Costa, and Napa, in this state, will be referred to as the California properties.

The gravamen of the action is to be found in the allegations of the amended complaint charging false and fraudulent representations made by defendant as to the values of the several lots or tracts of the California properties, the state of improvements thereon and subsisting liens standing against the same.

Defendant denied specifically all of the material allegations of the amended complaint and, in turn, by cross-complaint, charged plaintiff with falsely and fraudulently misrepresenting the value of the Oregon property to his damage in the sum of $11,000. At the close of plaintiff’s case the court granted defendant’s motion for nonsuit, and judgment was accordingly entered. Plaintiff appealed from said judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

A statement of the facts essential for an understanding of the orders appealed from, and the court’s decision, may be thus briefly made: Plaintiff was at the time of said exchange and for several years prior thereto had been a resident and owner of farm and orchard lands situate eight miles from the nearest town or village in Douglas County, Oregon, and engaged in conducting the same. His property consisted of seventy-five acres, fifty of which were planted to bearing fruit trees. The remaining twenty-five acres were used chiefly for growing grains. The improvements and equipment were modern and fully ample for the purposes *35 to which the land was devoted. The uneontradicted evidence is that the Oregon property, on the day of the exchange, was of the value of $18,000, but carried an encumbrance of $1,500.

Plaintiff and his wife had grown anxious to become residents of California, preferably San Francisco. It seems that the husband had fallen into conversation with one B. J. Sanford, “a neighbor,” whom he describes as having known for a- period of about one week. Sanford, having thus been made aware of plaintiff’s desires, represented that he was a real estate operator of thirty-five years’ activity and volunteered to go to San Francisco and obtain for him a “good trade.” This occurred during the latter days of September, 1917. Plaintiff furnished Sanford with a list of his property, together with photographic views, and the latter very shortly thereafter arrived in San Francisco and very promptly wrote to plaintiff that he had procured a good trade and advised him to make the exchange. The evidence indicated that upon arriving in San Francisco Sanford went direct to the offices of defendant B. B. Priem, who then had offices in the Phelan building. "Whether a prior acquaintance existed between the two does not appear.

On October 1, 1917, Sanford wrote a letter to plaintiff from San Francisco in which he inclosed a list of properties made out and offered by defendant Priem in exchange for his Oregon property. The list described in a general way several lots or “tracts” of land.

Closely folio wing, the Sanford letter, defendant Priem forwarded a second list to plaintiff. Sanford hurried back to Oregon and advised plaintiff to make the trade. At this juncture Sanford withdrew from the transaction as mysteriously as he had entered it. Plaintiff at once came to San Francisco. It was his first trip to this state and, consequently, he was a stranger. He went to Priem’s office, was entertained by him, and received his close personal attention throughout his stay. He seems to have had no independent advice or to have conversed or advised with anyone but defendant. He was hurriedly shown the several pieces of property afterward passed to Mm by the exchange, except the Napa City and Matthews lots, which he did not see. His visit to or examination of any one of said lots or tracts of land did not exceed five minutes and in some in *36 stances not more than one minute. The properties were quite widely separated, being in four counties. At the expiration of the third day of his visit plaintiff informed defendant that he had concluded not to make an exchange of properties and announced his intention of starting for his home. Defendant insisted on accompanying him, and did accompany him, to Oregon, stating that he wanted to see his “ranch anyway,’’ and also the country. After three or four days of negotiations at the Oregon ranch, defendant revised his property list by adding two Berkeley lots, and represented by positive statements that the properties listed, exclusive of said two Berkeley lots, were worth $18,000, and that said two lots were worth $2,500, less an $800 mortgage. This was sufficient to induce plaintiff, who had been theretofore in an uncertain frame of mind, to execute, on October 23, 1917, the contract of exchange. An exchange of deeds soon followed, both sides executing warranty deeds.

[1] It is an allegation of the amended complaint, and was the offer of plaintiff at the trial, to show by competent testimony, that the value of the California properties had been grossly misrepresented by defendant and that the aggregate value thereof was inequitable as compared with his Oregon property. The aggregate value of the California properties as represented by defendant, after balancing encumbrances and liens, had been so adjusted by the second list, exclusive of the Berkeley lots afterward included, as to make them appear to equal the actual value of plaintiff’s Oregon property. At the trial plaintiff, offered to show by numerous witnesses that the actual or market value of each lot, piece, or parcel of the California properties was at least fifty per cent below its represented value. Defendant objected to any and all offers to prove values, and the court sustained each of his objections. This ruling was erroneous. The only evidence as to the value of the California properties permitted by the court was brought out on the cross-examination of the plaintiff.

Upon what theory evidence of this character was excluded under the issues as framed does not clearly appear. Possibly it was excluded on the theory that plaintiff had full or equal opportunity with defendant to investigate for himself or that the representations as made were mere expressions of opinion rather than the affirmation of facts. Under *37 the facts and circumstances as disclosed hy the record of the case, these questions were matters of fact to be determined by the jury and not mere questions of law for decision by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
196 P. 72, 51 Cal. App. 32, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kleist-v-priem-calctapp-1921.