Larchmont Properties, Inc. v. Cooperman

80 S.E.2d 733, 195 Va. 784
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 15, 1954
DocketRecord 4145, 4146, 4147
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 80 S.E.2d 733 (Larchmont Properties, Inc. v. Cooperman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larchmont Properties, Inc. v. Cooperman, 80 S.E.2d 733, 195 Va. 784 (Va. 1954).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In these three companion suits in equity the evidence taken and heard in one cause was, by agreement of counsel, considered and acted upon as the evidence in the other two.

Maurice H. Cooperman and wife, Russell Forsyth Craig and wife, and Weldon Randolph Bishop and wife, appellees in this court, filed their respective bills of complaint in the circuit court against Larchmont Properties, Incorporated, Allan Homes, Incorporated, Irving Berman and George H. Hurwitz. Each named complainant and wife sought reformation of a contract and deed by which a lot of land with improvements thereon had been sold and granted to them by Larchmont Properties, Incorporated. In each instance appellees asserted that a lot of lesser size and value than the one they had agreed to buy had been substituted for the larger lot that the corporation was obliged to grant to them.

*786 ■ In their bills, complainants alleged that the vendor had extensively advertised lots for sale in “Section 3, Poplar Heights,” Fairfax county, Virginia, and that they had agreed with the corporation to purchase lots bearing specified numbers as disclosed on the plat of the subdivision exhibited to them and as designated by boundary markers on the land, the markers having been pointed out to them by agents of appellant, Larchmont Properties, Incorporated, when they viewed the property. Appellees, Cooperman and wife, charged that they had signed a written contract to purchase for $14,250 a lot and residence described in the contract as “Lot 34, Section 3, Poplar Heights, Fairfax County, Virginia as located on a plat of said Subdivision on file among the land records of Fairfax County # After they had made partial payment for lot 34, Larchmont Properties, Incorporated, wrongfully inserted the letter “A” after.the numeral 34 when it signed the contract, thus changing the lot number to 34A. This lot 34A covered a part of the area included within the lines of lot 34, but as it appeared on a new plat and survey of the property, which had not been exhibited to complainants and of which they were unaware, was of materially lesser depth. It is further alleged that when the deed was executed, the smaller lot was granted to complainants, and they did not learn of the substitution until some months later when they observed surveyors and workmen moving and replacing the boundary markers at the rear of their lot.

The allegations made by complainants Russell Forsyth Craig and wife, and William Randolph Bishop and wife in their bills of complaint are substantially similar to those made by Cooperman and wife. They charged that the lots with improvements thereon that they negotiated for and purchased from Larchmont Properties, Incorporated, were lots Nos. 37 and 38 of Section 3, Poplar Heights, as they appeared on the original subdivision and plat exhibited to them and that the markers and boundary lines of lots 37 and 38 were pointed out to them by agents of appellant, *787 Larchmont Properties, Incorporated, when they viewed the property. However, at the time these appellees signed the contracts, they noticed the letter “A” immediately following the numerals 37 and 38, and in their bills it is charged- that they inquired as to the meaning of the added letter, and were told by vendor’s agent that it had no significance. They allege that they were thus fraudulently induced and led to believe that' there had been no change in the plat and subdivision or in the dimensions of the lots, and that they honestly thought, as they had been told, that they were actually purchasing lots 37 and 38 as disclosed on the plat exhibited to them and included within the physical markers on the land. They, like Cooperman and wife, assert that they did not become aware of the fact that lesser sized lots, as disclosed by a re-subdivision and new plat of the land had been substituted in their contracts and deeds in place of the lots that they had been shown and agreed to purchase until after they had entered into possession and noticed surveyors and workmen making a resurvey of the lines of the lots and relocating the physical markers designating the rear boundary lines.

Before institution of these suits, the area cut off from the rear of lots 34, 37 and 38 by replatting and reduction of their depth was, along with other land, conveyed by Larchmont Properties, Incorporated, to Allan Homes, Incorporated. But in each bill of complaint it is alleged that the principal stockholders in both corporations are Irving Berman and George M. Hurwitz and their wives, and that “each corporation is the alter ego of the other and of” the individual appellants, and that all appellants were fully aware of and participated in the transactions of the others.

Each and all of the bills finally charged that complainants relied upon the material but false representations made by Larchmont Properties, Inc., and were thus misled and defrauded, and they prayed for reformation of the contracts and deeds, conveyance of the lots according to their original dimensions, and for general relief.

*788 Appellants demurred to the bills, but the demurrers were overruled, and no assignments of error have been taken to that ruling of the court.

Answers filed by appellants denied the allegations of fraud; alleged that complainants had been deeded the lots that they purchased; asserted in effect that complainants were relying upon oral agreements to purchase lots 34, 37 and 38, which were unenforceable under the statute of frauds; and that they were attempting to vary written contracts by parol evidence; and that complainants were not entitled to have the relief prayed for, i.e., reformation of the deeds on the allegations set out in the respective bills.

The testimony was voluminous, and most of it was heard ore terms by the court. Upon conclusion of the evidence and after hearing argument of counsel, the court entered decrees that reformed the deeds and adjudged that the complainants were the owners respectively of lots 34, 37 and 38 as disclosed on the original plat of the subdivision.

The material parts of the decree entered in the Cooperman case, which is similar in legal import to those entered in the other two cases, follow:

“This cause coming on to be heard * # * upon the bill of complaint, the answer of the defendants, the testimony of witnesses taken ore terms, the depositions of witnesses taken pursuant to notice and filed, the exhibits filed with the bill of complaint, the exhibits offered in evidence by the respective parties at the hearing and was argued by counsel, and the Court having taken time to consider * # *, doth adjudge, order and decree as follows:
“1. That the deed from Larchmont Properties, Inc. to Maurice H. Cooperman and Katherine I. Cooperman, his wife, dated June 1st, 1951, * * # be and the same hereby is reformed so that the description of the land thereby conveyed shall read as follows: Book 36 page 317
“All of Lot 34, Section 3, Poplar Heights as the same is dedicated, platted and recorded in Deed Book 801, page 443 of the land records of Fairfax County, Virginia. # * *”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 S.E.2d 733, 195 Va. 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larchmont-properties-inc-v-cooperman-va-1954.