Lewis v. McClure

16 P.2d 166, 127 Cal. App. 439, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 373
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4488.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 16 P.2d 166 (Lewis v. McClure) 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
Lewis v. McClure, 16 P.2d 166, 127 Cal. App. 439, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 373 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

THOMPSON (B. L.),

This suit was brought for damages for fraud alleged to have been exercised in procuring an exchange of properties. The plaintiffs secured a verdict against all of the defendants. A judgment was rendered accordingly. From this judgment several of the defendants have appealed. The McClures failed to appeal and the judgment against, them has become final.

The plaintiffs are husband and wife. They owned a lot in Chico upon which a store building and gas station were *441 constructed. This property was valued at $15,000, and was subject to a mortgage for $2,800. The grocery-store and gas station were operated by the plaintiffs. Their stock of merchandise was worth $3,500. They also owned ten acres of land near Lakeview, Oregon, valued at $500. The brothers, A. Bloomberg and L. Bloomberg, own the Anchor Hotel situated on J Street in Sacramento. They value this property at $150,000. The defendants, H. G. and Gladys F. McClure, held a ten-year lease on the hotel property, which expired February 1, 1940. The rent of the hotel was fixed at $1200 a month. The McClures owned the furniture and equipment of the hotel, which were subject to a chattel mortgage to secure an indebtedness of $2,025 held by the defendant, Klein Realty Service, Inc., a corporation. This indebtedness was due and a foreclosure suit was threatened by the mortgagee. The hotel business was not prosperous. The lessees were in default in the payment of rent. Mr. and Mrs. McClure also owned certain apartments on E Street in Sacramento valued at $5,500. This property was subject to a mortgage of $2,800.

In April, 1930, a representative of the McClures visited plaintiffs at Chico and proposed an exchange of properties. This agent succeeded in interesting the plaintiffs in the project. He invited them to inspect the Anchor Hotel at 'Sacramento to discuss the proposed exchange with the Mc-Clures. The following Sunday, April 13th, the plaintiffs went to Sacramento, where they met H. G. McClure and were shown some of the rooms of the hotel. McClure related to them an exaggerated and glowing tale of the prosperity of the business. He said the hotel business was worth $30,000 and that he was making a profit of $500' a month from the enterprise. He also told them of the E Street apartments which he owned subject to mortgage, and of the hotel furniture which he owned subject to a chattel mortgage of $2,500. He offered to exchange the hotel business and Sacramento apartments subject to their respective mortgages for the Chico and Lakeview properties belonging to the plaintiff, free of encumbrance. Several hours were consumed in this interview. Assuming that an agreement of exchange would be reached, McClure called upon the telephone Mr. Hall, who was a salesman in the employ of the Klein Realty Service Corporation, and requested him to come directly to the *442 Anchor Hotel and prepare an agreement of exchange. This instrument was promptly drawn by Mr. Hall as directed by McClure, and subsequently presented to Mr. and Mrs. Lewis for their signatures. This document provided for delivery of possession of the properties on the following Wednesday. The plaintiffs deny that they had agreed upon specific terms of an exchange, or that they knew the contents of the instrument. They did, however, sign the document. They then returned to their home at Chico.

The following Wednesday Mr. Lewis went to Sacramento and again interviewed Mr. McClure. He then declined to carry out the agreement to exchange properties. He was dissatisfied with some of the terms of the written document. He discovered by visiting the attorneys who represented the Bloombergs that the mortgage on the hotel furniture, which was held by the Klein Realty Service Corporation, was but $2,025 instead of $2,500, as the agreement recited. Mr. Lewis insisted on interviewing the owners of the hotel to obtain from them an assurance of procuring an assignment of the lease in the event of an exchange of properties. He sought to obtain permission from the owners to alter the hotel front to install a cigar stand therein. Mr. A. Bloom-berg came to the hotel and discussed the proposed exchange of properties with Lewis. During this conversation, A. Bloomberg made to J. A. Lewis some of the alleged false representations regarding the hotel business upon which this suit for damages is founded. McClure then told Mr. Lewis the hotel business was worth $45,000; that it was a prosperous business and a regular mint in which to make money. He said the rooms were constantly rented; that many of them yielded double rent for the reason that forty-five of them were occupied by railroad men who slept in the daytime. He assured Lewis that about ninety guests were regularly registered at the hotel each day; that the income from the hotel was $2,800 a month or about $100 a day, and that he derived a net profit of $500 a month. The respondents claim these statements were false and that they were thereby induced to exchange properties to their damage. There is substantial proof to indicate that the value of the hotel business and the value of the rent were greatly exaggerated. The business was operated at a loss. The income amounted to only half the sum represented by McClure. The hotel *443 was patronized by only about half the number of guests he claimed were registered therein.

In discussing the proposed exchange of properties with A. Bloomberg on the 16th of April, Lewis told him what McClure had said regarding the business. Bloomberg substantially confirmed the statement of McClure by saying he was surprised he did not make more profit than was claimed, for they had lately purchased the property for $150,000, after making a complete investigation and that the hotel was a perfect mint in which to make money. He also assured Lewis the sum of $1200 a month was not exorbitant rent “when you are making money”, adding that the hotel was a great place to make money. Bloomberg insisted on the payment of $2,025 in cash to satisfy the chattel mortgage held by the realty company, as a prerequisite to assigning the lease.

On the occasion of the visit of Mr. Lewis to the Anchor Hotel on April 16th, Carl A. Klein, who is a member of the Klein Realty Sendee Corporation, was called upon and directed by McClure to prepare the second contract of exchange. Mr. Lewis told him that he did not intend to “go ahead with the deal” on the terms which were incorporated in the original agreement. Mr. Klein then said: “Ton are making a mistake; you are offered an awful good proposition here; we have information that hotel is a good business, we know it sold for over $45,000. ... It is one of the best leading hotels, best businesses in Sacramento. ... It is a strictly man’s hotel. I never saw anything like it. The thing has been running full all the time. It is just a mint. If you "would like to go into the hotel business you cannot be mistaken.” This was a substantial confirmation of what Lewis had been told by McClure. Klein also told Lewis the chattel mortgage which his company held would have to be paid. In view of the statements made to Mr. Lewis by McClure, this assurance on the part of Klein tended strongly to induce the plaintiffs to make the exchange. It does appear that McClure, Bloomberg and Klein actively co-operated in procuring the exchange of properties.

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Bluebook (online)
16 P.2d 166, 127 Cal. App. 439, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-mcclure-calctapp-1932.