Murphy v. Sheftel

9 P.2d 568, 121 Cal. App. 533, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1250
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 11, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8172.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 9 P.2d 568 (Murphy v. Sheftel) 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
Murphy v. Sheftel, 9 P.2d 568, 121 Cal. App. 533, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1250 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

THE COURT.

As theresult of negotiations which commenced in February, 1926, plaintiffs in April of the same year purchased from defendants a lot fronting on Washington Street in San Francisco upon which was situated a three-story frame building containing fifteen two-room apartments, and paid therefor the sum of $55,000. Previous to the transfer to plaintiffs the premises had been leased by defendants for a term of years commencing on March 1, 1926, to a tenant, who agreed to pay a monthly rental of $502.50. The court found that plaintiffs in April, 1926, through the lessee mentioned, entered into possession of the premises. In June, 1926, plaintiffs served upon defendants a notice of rescission, claiming that the condition of the building had been misrepresented, that the same contained certain latent defects of which they were unaware at the time of the purchase and which defendants concealed.

The complaint alleged as a first cause of action that during the negotiations defendants falsely and fraudulently represented “(a) that the laminated girder in the basement of the building, which was partially exposed to view during the negotiations, was constructed of six planks each 2"xl4" of 10' span spiked together, four of said six planks resting on 8"x8" posts supported on concrete piers, and (b) that the first floor joists extended from the side walls across the girder mentioned and rested thereon . . . that in fact the girder was constructed “of only four planks of the above dimensions and two 2"x4" nailing pieces or ledgers spiked to the planks and running parallel therewith”, and the first floor joists did not cross the girder or rest thereon.

Plaintiffs’ second cause of action was based upon latent defects in the construction of the building which were alleged to have been concealed. These were the two instances of defective construction averred in the first cause of action, it being further alleged “(3) The first floor joists in said building are each 2"xl0" in dimension and are spaced 16" on centers, and the size and spacing of the said joists are such that the transverse extreme fiber stress in the said *536 joists is in excess of 1600 lbs per square inch,” and “(4) That the size and span of the laminated girder in said building is such that the transverse extreme fiber stress in said girder is in excess of 1600 lbs per square inch, and such that the compression across grain in said girder is in excess of 300# per square inch.”

The material allegations of the complaint were denied, and the court found that the defendant Sheftel for a long time prior to the negotiations mentioned had been to plaintiffs’ knowledge a builder of apartment houses, and that during the negotiations he represented himself to be an expert builder of such houses, with years of experience and success as such, but that it was not true that he represented that the girder and joists mentioned in the first cause of action were constructed in the manner alleged by plaintiffs; and further that no false or fraudulent representations of any character were made; that it is not true that plaintiffs were induced by the alleged representations to purchase or that they relied thereon. It was also found that the conditions described in the first and second cause of action existed when the negotiations commenced and are unchanged, and that in this connection the following conditions exist, namely, “(a) That there is an excess transverse extreme fiber stress in the said girder ranging from 20 to 30%, and that there would be no such excess if the girder was 12"xl4" instead of 8"xl4" in dimensions;

“(b) That considering the building load the method of relating the said joists to the said girder is not satisfactory construction;
“(c) That the compression across the grain in said girder ranges from 68% to 82% in excess of the limit, which is 300# per square inch;
“ (d) That in order to protect against that excessive compression, across grain in the girder the S^xS" supporting post should be capped, or that there should have been hardwood bolsters between the top of the post and the girder;
“(e) That the transverse extreme fiber stress in the first floor joists allowed by the building law is 1600# per square inch, and that the limit has been exceeded from 40% to 47%;
“(f) That the transverse extreme fiber stress in the said first floor joists would not have been exceeded if defendants *537 had used 2"xl2" joists spaced 16" center instead of 2"xl0" joists spaced 16" center;
“ (g) That the plans of said building called for first floor joists 2"xl2" in dimensions spaced 16" on center, not for the 2"xl0" joists which were used, and for joists that rest upon the girder and not upon 2"x4" ledgers;
“(h) That the transverse excess fiber stress in the first floor joists is in excess of the legal limit from 40% to 47% by reason of the span from the side wall to the girder being 14' instead of 12';
“ (i) That defendant should have used bolsters or joist hangers and also extra joists.”

Further, that while plaintiffs prior to the purchase had full opportunity and did inspect the building frequently it was then complete, and they were unable to discover the conditions described in the findings last quoted, or the third or fourth instances of defective construction set forth in their second cause of action without tearing out portions of the building, and that the same were then unknown to them and could not have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary diligence, but that they should and might by the exercise of ordinary diligence have known of the existence of the conditions described in their first cause of action; that defendants did not fraudulently conceal any of said conditions or prevent the detection thereof by plaintiffs, and that the defects described can be corrected at a cost of $500, which amount will fully compensate for any damage suffered by plaintiffs.

The court concluded from its findings that plaintiffs were not entitled to rescind, but should recover the amount found to be sufficient to correct the defects, and entered judgment accordingly.

Plaintiffs, who have appealed, admit that the testimony relating to the alleged fraud is conflicting and would require an affirmance of the findings on that issue; but they contend that they contracted for a well-constructed building and that there was an implied warranty that such was its condition ; that the defects found constituted a substantial failure of consideration, and that consequently it was error to deny rescission; also that the finding that the imperfections can be remedied for $500 is unsupported and erroneous because the cost was not in issue, and that the findings that *538 defendants had no knowledge of all the defects and that there was no concealment of any of them are likewise without support; further, that the omission to find the purchase price of the building was erroneous, and that the defense of substantial performance was not available to defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.2d 568, 121 Cal. App. 533, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-sheftel-calctapp-1932.