Norris v. Crandall

65 P. 568, 6 Cal. Unrep. 706, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1247
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1901
DocketL. A. No. 895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 P. 568 (Norris v. Crandall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norris v. Crandall, 65 P. 568, 6 Cal. Unrep. 706, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1247 (Cal. 1901).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Plaintiffs were the owners of certain land situated in San Diego county, and defendants, or some of them, were owners of certain improved lots in the city of Lincoln, Nebraska. An exchange, after much negotiation, was finally agreed upon between the parties, and deeds made September 10, 1897. Defendants had formerly resided in Lincoln, but had removed to San Diego in 1895. Plaintiffs resided in San Diego county, and had, up to 1897, never been in Lincoln. Upon the exchange of deeds, plaintiffs and defendants went into the possession of their several lots and tracts of land, plaintiffs removing to Lincoln, where they arrived and went into possession October 5, 1897. The complaint alleged that the San Diego land and improvements were of the value of $3,600, and the personal property included in the trade (being farm implements and other ranch belongings) was of the value of $600, making in all $4,200; that defendants, through defendant G. H. Crandall, acting in their behalf, represented their Lincoln property to be worth $6,000, and that it was encumbered to the extent of $1,100, and no more; “that said property was worth and of the market value of four thousand dollars, at least, over and above said mortgages. ’ ’ Certain alleged false representations as to the improvements on the lots are set forth, and that the property was bringing nine dollars per month rent, and “that said real property was level, and in fine shape, and in a fine and first-class condition.” It is alleged that plaintiffs had no personal knowledge of the property, and relied wholly on the representations of defendants, which, it is alleged, were entirely false, and fraudulently made to deceive and cheat plaintiffs, and on this ground the rescission is sought. Among other of the alleged false representations, it is alleged that, instead of a mortgage debt of $1,100 being on the property, it was encumbered in the further sum of $1,000.

The court made the following findings of fact: (1) That the San Diego property was of the same value, at the time of the exchange, as the Lincoln property, in excess of all mortgages thereon, to wit, of the value of $2,000. (2) That while the negotiations for the trade were progressing defendants gave to plaintiffs the name of a party then residing in San Diego, and pointed out his residence, to wit, J. F. Kinney, Esq., who, defendants informed plaintiffs, once owned a portion of the Lincoln property in question, and [708]*708could give plaintiffs any information they might desire regarding said Lincoln properties. (3) That defendant G. H. Crandall represented the Lincoln properties to be of the value of $4,000, and that he believed said properties to be worth that amount; that plaintiff A. G. Norris represented and that he believed his San Diego property to be worth $3,500, “but that neither plaintiffs’ said property nor defendants’ said property was worth but $2,000 over and above all mortgages and encumbrances, of which latter there were none on the Lincoln property except in the amount of $1,100.” The finding 3 then states certain specific representations made by defendant G. H. Crandall, and that they were true, and that he did not represent the property “to be in fine shape, level, and in fine and first-class condition,” and it is found that the representations made by said Crandall “were not made to deceive or to defraud plaintiffs, or either of them; that plaintiffs believed and relied upon the foregoing statements of said G. H. Crandall.” (4) That plaintiffs went upon and took possession of the Lincoln property October 5, 1897, “and took no steps and made no offer to rescind their contract of exchange of said properties,” and gave no notice of any dissatisfaction with the trade until July, 1898. (5) That plaintiffs knew, when the exchange was made, that defendants had not seen the Lincoln property since October, 1895. (6) That the allegations of fraud in plaintiffs’ complaint alleged against defendant G. H. Crandall are not sustained by the evidence. (7) That plaintiffs were not induced to exchange their property “by the fraudulent representations or statements of said defendants, or any of them. ’ ’

1. It is contended that findings 1, 3 and 4 are not supported by the evidence, and that on findings 1 and 3 the judgment should have been for plaintiffs, because the court found that defendants represented their Nebraska property to be worth $4,000, and that plaintiffs believed and relied upon these representations, whereas the court found the property to be worth only $2,000 over and above the mortgage of $1,100, thus making the value of $3,100 instead of $4,000. There would be force in the latter of the above contentions if the evidence compelled the conclusion that the exchange of properties was brought about by a false statement of value by defendants made as a substantive fact on which plaintiffs relied as a fact, and not as defendants’ opinion as to the fact. [709]*709We do not, however, think that the evidence would justify any such conclusion. The evidence was that negotiations for the exchange were entered upon in the early part of August, 1897, and continued at intervals until in September, when the deeds- passed. Defendant G. H. Crandall testified fully as to the representations made by him (and he is the only defendant charged with having made any). After stating what he told plaintiff Adolphus Norris as to the improvements, the situation of the lots, and also as to the condition of the improvements in 1895, when the defendants last saw the property, the amount of encumbrances on the property, and like matters, as to which the court found with defendants, the witness continued: “I told him in good times the whole property there—the three lots and four houses—ought to be worth $4,000; but I told him it was like property here,—it was at a standstill property was not moving much; and that, if he had to sell, I did not think that he could get more than half that amount; I said: ‘It is just like it is with your property here. You place your property at $3,000, and you know the way property is selling here that you could not get half that for it.’ We had several conversations, and they were all materially just about the same. I told him, if he wished to know more about the place, he had better write; that he could find any quantity of real estate men there that could tell him all about the property. ‘If you don’t want to go to that trouble, there is a man in the city of the name of Judge Kinney, that platted that addition, who could tell you all about it.’ I told him that the property when we -left, in 1895, was in good condition, but how it was at the time we made the trade I did not know.....I told him there was a draw running through, the place, or dry creek, called ‘Antelope Creek,’ and that this two-story house was built into the bank of the creek or draw, and that the chicken-house was built into the same bank; and all those representations were true.” It appeared that the property was situated in about the center of the city, taken as a whole; that there were fine residences erected near by; that the location was favorably located with reference to street-cars and to the business portion of the city, to schoolhouses, churches and like conveniences. Some of the conversations between plaintiff Adolphus Norris and defendant G. H. Crandall [710]*710were in the presence and hearing of the latter’s father and sister in the store of G. H. Crandall. They were called as witnesses, and corroborated the statements made to Adolphus Norris by G. H. Crandall, as testified to by the latter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 P. 568, 6 Cal. Unrep. 706, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norris-v-crandall-cal-1901.