Mumford v. Smith

154 P. 153, 89 Wash. 98, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 664
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1916
DocketNo. 12665
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 P. 153 (Mumford v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mumford v. Smith, 154 P. 153, 89 Wash. 98, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 664 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

In the early part of the year 1913, the respondent Carmichael J. Smith, a real estate broker doing -business in the city of Everett, inserted an advertisement in a local paper offering to exchange a hotel in that city for [99]*99farm lands. The appellant, Mumford, noticing the advertisement, called upon Smith with a view of making such an exchange. Mrs. Mumford at that time owned a forty-acre tract of land situated near Marysville, in Snohomish county, and some one hundred lots in an addition to the town of Des Moines, in Eng county. Together they visited the hotel mentioned in the advertisement, and the appellant expressed her satisfaction therewith, but no serious, if any, negotiations were had with the owner looking to an exchange of property. Smith had, in the meantime, acquired the legal title to an apartment house and the lots on which the same was situate, in the city of Everett, and he immediately directed the appellant’s attention to this property, offering it in exchange for her property. After some negotiation, an exchange was effected, the appellant taking the apartment property, and the respondent taking the forty-acre tract and some seventy-one of the lots in the Des Moines addition. The deeds were exchanged on June 13, 1913. Later on, the appellant conceived that she had been overreached in the transaction, and brought the present action to rescind the contract. In her complaint she set forth at length the negotiations between herself and the respondent Smith leading up to the exchange, and charged him with falsely misrepresenting the income derived from the property, and with making false representations concerning its condition, its desirability as an-apartment house, and its proximity to certain improvements about to be instituted by a public corporation which would greatly enhance its value. Issue was taken on the complaint, and a trial had which resulted in a judgment for the respondent.

The trial judge made no findings of fact, nor does the record otherwise disclose the grounds upon which he rested his decision. The evidence makes it clear, however, that he could not have found that the appellant was not defrauded. On this question, there is no room for even a reasonable doubt. She gave up property in the exchange which the re[100]*100spondent admits had a substantial value, and which conservative witnesses estimated to be worth from $4,000 to $5,000 over and above its incumbrances. She received nothing in the exchange other than the apartment house property and certain furniture contained therein. No disinterested witness valued the apartment property in excess of $3,500, or the furniture in excess of $300, and' some of them placed the values at even a less sum. The apartment property was taken subject to two mortgages, the one for $1,300, on which the interest was in arrears for more than a year, and the other for $1,500, on which the interest was in arrears for more than a year and a half; in fact, on the latter mortgage no interest had been paid since its execution. Giving the property its highest valuation, she did not receive, for the very considerable property she deeded to the respondent, values in excess of four or five hundred dollars.

There is but little question, also, that she was actually deceived and overreached by the respondent. While many of the representations she charges him with are denied by him, the record leaves but little doubt in our minds as to where the truth lies. He represented that the property would produce in rentals $24 per week, whereas it could not subsequently be made to bring as much as half of that sum, and this under the management of the respondent himself; he represented to her that the property was in a desirable locality for an apartment house, whereas it was shown that it is situated in what was formerly a restricted district, and because of its locality was not sought by a desirable class of tenants; he represented that a railway, company had recently purchased lands in the vicinity for a right of way and would shortly erect a depot near the property, whereas no such right of way had been purchased nor was the building of a depot, so far as shown, even contemplated by a railway company ; he represented that the property could be turned into cash within a short period at a price which would net the appellant the values she placed upon the property she was [101]*101given in exchange, and that he had a customer ready to take it at such a price, or to use her language: “He said he wanted three months time within which to sell the property, because he had a purchaser from Seattle waiting for their money to be handed over to them when the court decided, to buy the Knapp place. He said they had been up several times and were perfectly satisfied with the place and just asked for time until their money could be got from the east; they seemed to be heirs, as I understood it, and their case was in court and was to be decided in a short time, and by the time the case would be decided, the depot would be started and he would get $12,000 for that place; that was the way the deal was planned. He was to sell the Knapp property to those people and give me, less the commission, $12,000; the mortgage to.be deducted;” whereas he knew that the property could not be so sold for the price stated, that he had not shown it to any Seattle parties and in fact had no customer. As we say, there can be no other conclusion drawn from the evidence than that the appellant believed these representations and was induced to make the exchange she did make because of them.

The further question is, do these representations justify a rescission of the contract. It is our opinion that they do. In the first place, the difference between the values of the properties exchanged was so gross as to challenge the good faith of the transaction. In so far as the appellant is concerned, there was a gross inadequacy of consideration — for the thousands that she gave up she received only hundreds in return — and gross inadequacy of consideration has always been regarded as a badge of fraud. In the second place, all of the representations made by the respondent were not mere “seller’s praise” or mere matters of opinion. Some of them, at least, related to matters of fact, the truth or falsity of which could not readily be ascertained by the appellant. She could not readily ascertain, for example, whether a right of way had been purchased by a railroad company for a line of [102]*102railway which would run near the property and that a depot building was to be constructed near the property, nor could she readily ascertain whether the appellant had under way a sale of the property which was being delayed merely because of certain necessary formalities in court procedure; and these we think were representations with reference to material matters, purposely used with the intent to deceive and defraud.

We said in Best v. Offield, 59 Wash. 466, 110 Pac. 17, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 55, that all the cases agree that the purchaser may rely upon representations of the vendor where for any reason the falsity of the representations are not readily ascertainable, and, clearly, the principle is applicable to certain of the representations made here. Some of the representations claimed to have been false and fraudulent may fall under the denomination matter of opinion; but the result of the whole was that the appellant was overreached and the respondent, because thereof, obtained an unjust and unconscionable advantage. The observation of Judge Root in Stone v. Moody, 41 Wash. 680, 84 Pac. 617, 5 L. R. A. (N.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 P. 153, 89 Wash. 98, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mumford-v-smith-wash-1916.