Perkins v. Ketchum

211 Cal. App. 2d 245, 27 Cal. Rptr. 278, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1501
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 1962
DocketCiv. 26263
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 211 Cal. App. 2d 245 (Perkins v. Ketchum) 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
Perkins v. Ketchum, 211 Cal. App. 2d 245, 27 Cal. Rptr. 278, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1501 (Cal. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding

plaintiffs compensatory damages arising out of fraudulent representations by the defendant with reference to the purchase of a parcel of real property.

A résumé of some of the facts is as follows: the defendant and/or his wife had owned the property in question for about eight years, Defendant was a licensed real *247 estate salesman or broker from 1945 to the time of the sale in dispute in August 1958. Defendant represented that he knew the requirements of the laws with reference to the development of the property in question for residential income purposes.

The plaintiffs, at the time of signing the contract on August 22, 1958, had been in this state about two weeks. They previously had resided in Washington State where they were engaged in the painting business as a contractor or subcontractor. They had no experience in California with real property transactions or with any law with reference thereto, or with the purchase of property for improvement with dwelling units.

The property in question was located in the unincorporated area of Los Angeles County and was zoned as R-2. It was L-shaped, consisting of a rectangular portion with a street frontage of 63.1 feet and a depth of 303.03 feet and a portion without street frontage with a width of 126.2 feet and a depth of 164.04 feet. The total area was 39,822.41 square feet. Two single family dwelling houses and two duplexes and a small shack were located on the property. The structures were estimated to be about 60 years of age and contributed little, if anything, to the value of the property. The ground was littered with trash, debris, undergrowth and broken bottles which were 2 feet deep in some areas.

The plaintiffs were interested in purchasing the property, as the defendant well knew, for the purpose of improving it with the maximum number of rental dwelling units. To induce the plaintiffs to buy the property the defendant represented (1) that he had a plot plan of the property showing 15 dwelling units thereon which had been approved by the County Department of Building and Safety and that the property met all requirements of all laws and ordinances for the construction or location thereon of a total of 15 family dwelling units; (2) that he knew the requirements of the county and of the county ordinances with reference to the improvement of said property and that the property met all requirements for the construction or location thereon of a total of 15 family dwellings or dwelling houses; (3) that the plaintiffs, if they purchased the property and if they acquired the dwelling houses to be relocated thereon, could obtain a permit from the Department of Building and Safety to locate such dwelling houses on said property, it being required only that the dwelling houses, as structures, comply *248 with the requirements of the building code of the county, as the property met all requirements of all laws and ordinances for the location thereon of 15 dwellings at any one time; (4) that he knew the requirements for sewer mains and sewer installations of the county as said requirements pertained to said property; that there were two 4-ineh sewer mains in said property, one of which connected the front house to the public sewer in front of said property and the other of which connected the other three houses to the public sewer, that the latter 4-inch sewer main was 11 feet deep at the front of the property and at all points was of sufficient depth to provide adequate fall for any of the dwellings then upon or which might be placed therein, and that to provide lawful sewage outlets for any added dwellings which might be placed upon said property, plaintiffs would need only to connect such added dwelling units thereto at the nearest point on the existing main; (5) that the dwelling houses thereon were served by two water mains, each of which was 1-1/2 inches in diameter, that such mains were adequate to serve 15 dwelling units on the property and that added units to be placed on the property could be adequately served by connecting the added units to the existing water mains at the closest points. Defendant also told plaintiffs that the property was zoned for R-2 and that such zoning permitted two dwelling units on the first 5,000 square feet and one additional unit for each 2,500 square feet, and that a 4-inch sewer main, such as was in the property, would accommodate 64 units (meaning houses).

There was testimony and evidence which, if believed by the court, indicated that the defendant never had any plans showing 15 units on the property which had either been approved by the County Department of Building and Safety or submitted to that department for approval. Under county ordinance 1494 no more than 12 dwelling units could be placed upon the property and under county ordinance 4478 a recorded subdivision map was required for more than four rental family dwelling units on the property and there was no such recorded subdivision map. Further, that the defendant did not know the requirements with reference to the sewer mains and installations. County ordinance 6130 required the installation of a main line sewer having an inside diameter of not less than 8 inches for the development of the property and required that the laterals have at least a 2 per cent fall and be at least 1 foot below the surface. The *249 existing mains were less than 1 foot below the surface and the requirements above indicated could not be met by the existing sewers.

The plaintiffs, after the defendant made some of the representations heretofore set forth and before the contract was signed, did call the Department of Building and Safety and inquired as to the meaning of R-2 zoning and as to whether a 4-inch sewer pipe would accommodate 64 units (meaning houses). The Department of Building and Safety without reference to the qualifying provisions of other ordinances which applied to the property in question had ascribed substantially the same meaning to R-2 zone as the defendant had given. The plaintiff also was told by the Department of Building and Safety that a 4-inch sewer pipe would accommodate 64 units (meaning plumbing drain outlets and not 64 dwelling units).

The plaintiffs produced the only witness who testified as an expert as to the value of the property.

Prior to the taking of any evidence the defendant requested the judge to make an order excluding the witnesses. The request was refused. Thereafter the judge, upon his own motion, excluded the witnesses from the courtroom.

Appellant now asserts in effect that the evidence was insufficient to support the essential findings of the court; further that the plaintiffs themselves made an inspection of the premises and talked to the Department of Building and Safety and therefore they cannot now assert that they relied upon defendant’s representations. Further that it was prejudicial error to refuse to grant the motion for exclusion of witnesses; that the damages were excessive.

The defendant knew that his representation with reference to having a plot which had been approved by the Department of Building and Safety was false.

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Bluebook (online)
211 Cal. App. 2d 245, 27 Cal. Rptr. 278, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-ketchum-calctapp-1962.