Proctor v. Arakelian

280 P. 368, 208 Cal. 82, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 353
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1929
DocketDocket No. S.F. 12748.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 280 P. 368 (Proctor v. Arakelian) 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
Proctor v. Arakelian, 280 P. 368, 208 Cal. 82, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 353 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered in defendants’ favor in an action arising from a transaction wherein plaintiff exchanged valuable real property owned by him and situate in the business district of the city of Oakland, at the northwest corner of Clay and Sixteenth Streets, 50x75 feet, upon which was located a substantial five-story brick building, with basement, for 1,000 acres of unproductive, unimproved and unmarketable land, belonging to respondent K. Arakelian, and of the quality known as magnesia alkaline clay, situate in the county of Fresno, and United States Liberty bonds of the par value of $55,000. Said bonds were found by the trial judge to be of the actual market value, including accrued interest, of but $49,614.01. Plaintiff in turn executed in favor of defendant Rosa Arakelian, wife of K. Arakelian, his promissory note for the sum of $30,000, secured by n trust deed upon said Fresno County real property, in which deed respondents K. Arakelian and D. Arakelian, the son of *85 defendants K. and Rosa K. Arakelian, were named as trustees. The complaint alleged that plaintiff was damaged in the amount of $79,535.99 by certain false and fraudulent representations as to the quality, adaptability and value of the Fresno County lands made to him by said K. Arakelian acting for himself and on behalf of his wife, Rosa K. Arakelian, and that “by reason of said damages as aforesaid the sum of $79,535.99 of the purchase price of said Oakland property has not been paid and the whole thereof, to-wit, $79,535.99, is now unpaid, and that the plaintiff claims to have and has a vendor’s lien upon said Oakland property for said sum of $79,535.99, and that the plaintiff is entitled to have said deed of trust and note cancelled and the amount thereof credited upon said sum of $79,535.99.”

The prayer of plaintiff was that by reason of the fraudulent representations which induced him to enter into the transaction with K. Arakelian the note and deed of trust executed by him to Rosa K. Arakelian be canceled and that said sum of $79,535.99 be deemed to be a valid and subsisting lien upon said Oakland property and that the usual decree of sale be made and that the proceeds thereof be applied in payment of the amount found to be due plaintiff and that defendants be barred and foreclosed of all right, claim or equity of redemption in said' premises and that plaintiff have judgment against K. Arakelian and Rosa K. Arakelian for any deficiency that might remain after applying all of the proceeds of the sale to the satisfaction of said judgment. The trial court’s refusal to grant appellant a trial by jury is also made an assignment of prejudicial error.

An expert chemist familiar with the district in which said Fresno County lands are situate caused borings to be made in various parts of said tract and analyzed the soil taken therefrom and pronounced it unfit for any purpose. Others well' acquainted with said lands and the district in which they are situate testified that said lands were low and flat, subject to heavy overflows from adjacent sloughs and streams, and by reason of the impervious clay strata which lies at varying depths below the surface, overflow waters are held in vast quantities upon the surface until late in the summer season: that the soil is so strongly Impregnated with alkali and magnesia as to make it im *86 possible to grow any kind of fruit-trees or vegetables or cereals known to produce crops in that section of the state. The cost of reclamation and the elimination of superabundant hostile elements would be greatly in excess of the revenue which could be derived from it for any known farm or agricultural uses.

Upon the record before us there is absolutely no other conclusion deducible from the evidence but the one that said lands have but a nominal value. The owner, Mr. K. Arakelian, testified that in placing said real property in the hands of his agent, the Laymance Real Estate Company of Oakland, for exchange purposes he declined to place a value upon the same when requested to do so by Mr. William J. Laymance, a member of said company who personally conducted the transaction. At the trial neither K. Arakelian nor his son, D. Arakelian, aged twenty-eight years of age, and familiar with said lands, nor his wife, Rosa K. Arakelian, who claims to he the exchange owner of the Oakland real property, gave any evidence as to value. William J. Laymance was deceased at the time of trial. The claim made by K. Arakelian that he placed no value upon said lands to his agent is disputed by the appellant. The inherent improbability that K. Arakelian declined to value said property in the circumstances of the situation and the directions he is reported to have given to his agent, Laymance, on this subject pending negotiations, will be considered later.

The Oakland property at the time of the execution of said agreement to exchange property was leased to L. H. Spotts by lease dated November 1, 1919, for a term of five years. The rentals reserved for the ground floor and basement were, for the first six months, $500 per month; for the second six months, $550 per month; for the third six months, $600 per month; for the fourth six months, $650 per month; for the third year, $750 per month; for the fourth year, $850 per month; for the fifth year, $950 per month, subject to the owner’s right of cancellation. The upper floors were on a straight monthly rental basis of $500 per month. Payment of rentals was secured by a cash interest-bearing bond in the sum of $2,000. Said real property was held subject to a mortgage of $100,000 in favor of the Oakland Bank of Savings.

*87 Negotiations were first opened and a proposal of exchange was first made by K. Arakelian in writing on June 4, 1921. At that time said building was earning as rentals $1150 per month—$650 for the ground floor and basement and $500 per month for the other four stories. The rentals under the transferred lease dated November 1, 1919, were to be increased at the rate of $100 per month for the third, fourth and fifth years, respectively. The last year’s rental, as provided in said lease, aggregated $17,400 gross per annum—$1450 per month—which was better than interest at eight and one-half per cent per annum computed on $200,000. Rentals derived from real property are an aid in determining value. (Bonnarjee v. Pike, 43 Cal. App. 502 [185 Pac. 479]; Sullivan v. Helbing, 66 Cal. App. 478 [226 Pac. 803]; Atlas Development Co. v. National Surety Co., 190 Cal. 329 [212 Pac. 196]; Applied Evidence, vol. 5, p. 4595; 10 Cal. Jur. 847.)

Appellant Proctor had operated in the purchase and sale of business property in the city of Oakland, but was never engaged in the occupation of real estate broker, and it was his rule not to invest in country properties. Mr. Laymance had been in his office many times in an effort to interest him in the purchase of real properties which he had listed for sale and had acted as his broker in the purchase of other properties. Appellant first learned of the Fresno County property early in the year 1921.

William J. Laymance was the active intermediary in putting the deal through. He first brought said Fresno County property to the attention of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
280 P. 368, 208 Cal. 82, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-v-arakelian-cal-1929.