Rubens v. Pember

460 P.2d 803, 170 Colo. 182, 1969 Colo. LEXIS 729
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 27, 1969
Docket22436, 22437
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 460 P.2d 803 (Rubens v. Pember) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rubens v. Pember, 460 P.2d 803, 170 Colo. 182, 1969 Colo. LEXIS 729 (Colo. 1969).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Hodges.

The two captioned actions were consolidated for trial to the court without a jury and the two writs of error are deemed consolidated here. The plaintiffs in error in both will be referred to herein as plaintiffs and the defendants in error as defendants or by name.

In No. 22436, the plaintiffs, who are husband and wife, claimed that they were induced to purchase the stock of the Downtowner Restaurant in Denver by fraudulent representations made to them by the defendants. The defendants, A. M. Pember, B. Pember and Agnes Bosler, were the sellers of the stock and defendant Leonard Cown was the real estate salesman who negotiated the sale. The defendant National Real Estate Management Company was the employer of defendant Cown. It was charged in the complaint that the real estate salesman and his employer actively participated in the alleged fraud.

At the commencement of this action, the plaintiffs were in default on a promissory note they had given to the sellers as part of the purchase price. Defendant sellers thereupon brought a separate action (No. 22437) against the plaintiffs' to collect on this promissory note and to foreclose on their security which consisted of a chattel *185 mortgage on the restaurant equipment and the stock of the corporation.

Upon the completion of the plaintiffs’ evidence in the consolidated trial of these two actions and before the defendants presented any evidence, the defendants moved for an involuntary dismissal of the plaintiffs’ complaint under R.C.P. Colo. 41 (b) on the ground that on the facts and law, the plaintiffs have shown no right to relief. The trial court granted the defendants’ motion, and also, granted the defendant sellers’ prayer for judgment on their complaint against the plaintiffs for the balance of the promissory note in the amount of $42,134.28 plus interest. From these judgments, the plaintiffs seek review on their writs of error.

The assignments of error do not in our view present any basis for reversal of either of the judgments, and we therefore affirm these judgments of the trial court. Only a brief statement of the facts as shown from the testimony and evidence is required for a resolution of the issues involved.

In early 1962, defendant Cown, the real estate salesman, approached the defendant owners of the Downtowner Restaurant for the purpose of a sales listing. A sales price of $70,000 was agreed upon. At the time, one of the owners, defendant A. M. Pember, gave to the real estate salesman certain operational statements of the restaurant for the years 1959, 1960 and the first eleven months of 1961, and authorized the showing of these statements to prospective purchasers. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiffs, both of whom had previous experience in the operation and ownership of restaurants, contacted defendant Cown about buying a restaurant. After looking at several establishments, the plaintiffs agreed to look at the Downtowner Restaurant, although initially they felt the price of $70,000 was out of their range. The plaintiffs testified that after seeing the operational statements, which showed a profit of approximately $30,000 *186 for each of the previous three years, they agreed to purchase this restaurant.

The Downtowner Restaurant was incorporated and all its stock was held by the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Pember and Agnes Bosler. The plaintiffs in exchange for the stock of the corporation paid $15,000 down, executed a promissory note for the $55,000 balance, and gave security consisting of a chattel mortgage on the restaurant equipment and the shares of stock. The plaintiffs took possession of the premises on April 1, 1962 and conducted the business for over a year until July 1963 when they filed their action in fraud against the defendants. They made regular payments on the promissory note until June of 1963 when they defaulted. From the record, it appears that the plaintiffs were still in possession of the premises at the time of the trial.

The plaintiffs base their allegation of fraud on the operational statements shown to them by defendant Cown. The crux of their claim is that these statements did not reflect the full and actual expenses of operation and that while the operational statements showed a profit for each period of approximately $30,000, this profit, in reality, was substantially less because the figures did not reflect the salaries paid to the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Pember and Agnes Bosler during the previous three years when they owned and operated it. The plaintiffs’ evidence also attempted to show other inaccuracies in the operational statements. Defendant Cown, who was called to testify under cross examination, testified that he had told the plaintiffs that the $30,000 per year “... represented the salaries of the owners for working in the place.” The plaintiffs also testified that the restaurant, after they had purchased it, continued to do the same amount of business as it had done previously for approximately one year, and that after that the business began to decline.

I.

The plaintiffs assert that it was error for the trial court *187 to dismiss their complaint at the conclusion of the presentation of their case on the ground that the evidence of fraud was not clear and convincing because:

“... at this stage of a trial all evidence favorable to the plaintiff must be viewed in the most favorable light, together with any favorable inferences that may be drawn therefrom, and all evidence favorable to the defendant or any favorable inferences drawn therefrom must be disregarded; that following this rule of law the plaintiffs clearly established a prima facie case.”

The above proposition upon which the plaintiffs claim error would have had validity had this case been tried to a jury. However, it was not. The trial judge was the fact finder, and therefore, our holding in Teodonno v. Bachman, 158 Colo. 1, 404 P.2d 284 is applicable here. In Teodonno, which involved alleged fraud on the part of the vendor of residential real estate, we stated:

“It is true that when reviewing a dismissal entered at the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ evidence in a jury trial, the rule urged by the plaintiffs that the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs is applicable. Eberle v. Hungerford, 130 Colo. 167, 274 P.2d 93; Huddleston v. Ingersoll Co., 109 Colo. 134, 123 P.2d 1016. But when the trial is to the court, as it was here, the trial court is the finder of the fact and may make its findings áñd render judgment against the plaintiffs at the close of the’plaintiffs’ case. Rule 41(b)(1), R.C.P. Colo. The question on review of such action is not whether the plaintiffs made a prima facie case, but whether a judgment in favor of the defendant was justified on the plaintiffs’ evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
460 P.2d 803, 170 Colo. 182, 1969 Colo. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rubens-v-pember-colo-1969.