Ramsdell v. Raymond

183 P. 569, 42 Cal. App. 215, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 700
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 15, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1881.
StatusPublished

This text of 183 P. 569 (Ramsdell v. Raymond) 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
Ramsdell v. Raymond, 183 P. 569, 42 Cal. App. 215, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 700 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Appeal from a judgment entered against defendant and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

In the year 1910 defendant had bargained for the purchase of a certain thirteen unsurveyed lots then owned by one Clark, and as evidence of his right to such property had received the following writing:

“Received of R. R. Raymond four thousand dollars in payment for (13) thirteen lots in Laurel Canyon known as the Clark Addition, a part of the Hermit Place. These lots are to be 25x100 in size and the title to be perfect.
“E. H. Clark.”

At the same time plaintiff was the owner of an equitable interest in certain real estate for which she had paid about the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars. This equitable interest she agreed to exchange with defendant for the rights which he had acquired in the lots first mentioned, and the exchange was effected. In consummating the deal, plaintiff was taken by defendant into the presence of Clark and a new receipt was executed by Clark in favor of the plaintiff, which was identical in terms with that above set out except that plaintiff’s name was inserted instead of the name of the defendant. Plaintiff was informed at the time that the lots had not been surveyed. The lots were never surveyed and deed was never delivered to the plaintiff, notwithstanding her demand therefor, which demand was made upon Raymond; and it appears that at the time of the transaction an attachment had been levied against the property out of which the lots were to be carved by a creditor of Clark’s and the property was afterwards sold under execution. It was bid in by a friend of Clark’s for the latter’s benefit, but before the period of redemption expired another creditor of Clark’s redeemed from the purchaser, and so the legal title which had rested in Clark at the date of the transaction herein referred to was taken away. More than three years after the date of the transaction plaintiff brought this action.

It is difficult, indeed, to determine just what character to give the alleged cause of action set forth in plaintiff’s amended complaint, for it contains allegations in part appropriate to the equitable action of rescission, and in *217 part appropriate to the legal action for damages by reason of failure of consideration. The action as first brought included both Raymond and Clark as defendants, but before the trial dismissal was made as to Clark. In the complaint it was alleged that Raymond and Clark conspired together to cheat and defraud the plaintiff and that they falsely and fraudulently represented that defendant Raymond was the owner of thirteen lots in Laurel Canyon, the same being known as Clark’s Addition, and that Clark stated that Raymond had purchased the said thirteen lots from him (Clark) and had paid the sum of four thousand dollars therefor, and that Raymond exhibited a receipt signed by Clark wherein it was fraudulently represented that Raymond had paid to Clark the sum of four thousand dollars as the purchase price of said lots. It is further alleged “that said receipt and each and every part thereof was a fabrication, false and fraudulent, and was shown to and exhibited to plaintiff for the further purpose of deceiving and misleading her to believe the said false and fraudulent representations and statements so made by defendants and each of them as to the existence of the Clark Addition, and of the ownership thereof by Raymond, for which he had paid to defendant Clark in cash a large sum of money, as defendants Raymond and Clark and each of them well knew the same and each and every of said statements to be false. That in fact and in truth the said defendant Raymond had not then and there nor prior thereto and has not since paid to said Clark the sum of four thousand dollars or anything of value whatever for said Laurel Canyon lots, and the said Clark did not then, nor theretofore, nor at any time thereafter own a clear or an encumbered or any title to thirteen lots, or to any lot or piece or parcel of land in Laurel Canyon; that there was not then and there or ever before or since that time any lots in said Laurel Canyon known as lots in the Clark Addition, and there never has been any such addition in said canyon laid out or recorded or laid out and recorded or at all, as provided or otherwise or at all, . . . and defendant Raymond then and there, and in the presence of Clark offered to convey and transfer to plaintiff said thirteen lots in Laurel Canyon by good and sufficient title thereto free from all liens and encumbrances, in even exchange for plaintiff’s interest in real estate in the town of *218 Monte Vista.” Further allegation was made “that relying upon the integrity and good faith of said defendant Raymond, plaintiff believed said statements and each of them as to his ownership of the said described Laurel Canyon lots, and relying upon his said promise to convey to plaintiff said lots by a good and sufficient title free from all liens and encumbrances, ...” conveyed the interest owned by her in the Monte Vista property. Allegations followed that Raymond had refused to convey the lots and that the plaintiff had offered to rescind and demanded that title to her property be restored to her. Further allegation followed to the effect that Raymond had appropriated plaintiff’s real estate to his own use and benefit, which she alleged he held “in'trust” for plaintiff; and the complaint concluded with the following prayer: “Plaintiff prays for judgment against said defendant Raymond upon an implied contract for direct payment of money in the sum of four thousand dollars, the value of the real estate so conveyed away by him in violation of his said trust, and that an attachment against the property of defendant Raymond issue forthwith for the amount of said debt; and for such further relief ...” The court made findings which in general followed the allegations of the complaint as to the alleged fraudulent representations made, and concluded by first entering judgment for the sum of four thousand dollars. Later, when the motion for new trial was presented, the court made an additional order that unless plaintiff remit all amounts except the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, the motion for new trial would be granted. The excess was accordingly remitted.

It will be noted that plaintiff did not allege that Raymond represented that title to the lots which rested in Clark was then free and unencumbered. She does allege that the title was not unencumbered, but she knew when she completed the transactions that by the terms of the receipt itself Raymond had no title which he could then convey to her, and that the legal title rested in Clark; in other words, that Raymond’s interest was a mere equitable one evidenced by an unrecorded receipt. She was also informed, as the undisputed evidence shows, that Clark was to survey the property and furnish the deed. That she exchanged her equity for the rights which were evidenced by the receipt from *219 Clark to Raymond, seems to us to be beyond the possibility of debate. Plaintiff in her testimony stated that the property composing the thirteen lots was shown to her, and offered no evidence to show that the property was not of great value or that it was not the same property that Clark owned at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 569, 42 Cal. App. 215, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsdell-v-raymond-calctapp-1919.