Rummer v. Throop

231 P.2d 313, 38 Wash. 2d 624
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1951
Docket31573
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 231 P.2d 313 (Rummer v. Throop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rummer v. Throop, 231 P.2d 313, 38 Wash. 2d 624 (Wash. 1951).

Opinion

Hamxey, J.

The vendees under a contract to purchase a farm brought this action to rescind for fraud. The complaint alleges that false representations, upon which the vendees relied, were made with respect to the size and productive capacity of the farm, the acreage seeded, freedom from weeds, and the harmless effect of magnesium oxide dust from a nearby industrial plant. The plaintiffs sought recovery of $8,200 paid on the purchase price and $8,575 as. consequential damages.

The vendors denied the principal allegations of the complaint. They also counterclaimed for recognition of their forfeiture of the contract and to recover $431 on miscellaneous items. Issue was joined on these pleadings, and the case was tried to the court without a jury.

The plaintiffs are L. V. Rummer (who will hereafter be referred to as if he were the only plaintiff and respondent) , and his wife, Elsie Rummer. Rummer was born and raised on a farm. When he was twenty-eight years of age he left the farm and joined the Spokane police department. He remained with the police department for twenty-one years, and was then retired for disability. The year was then 1945. After leaving the police department, Rummer purchased and began operating an eighty-acre farm in Spokane county. It is referred to in the record as the Wild Rose Prairie farm.

' He was assisted in this venture by his son Lloyd, then about eighteen years old. In 1946, Rummer and his son decided to exchange the eighty-acre farm for a larger one. Rummer listed his farm for sale or exchange with the Fred C. Ashley Company, Spokane real-estate agents and brokers, and made known his interest in acquiring a larger farm. On November 4, 1946, W. E. Stansbury, an agent employed by the Ashley company, took Rummer and his son to inspect a four-hundred-sixty-acre farm which had been listed for sale with the Ashley company. This farm was *627 owned by Buell Throop (who will hereafter be referred to as if he were the only defendant and appellant), and his wife, Dorothy Throop.

The Throop farm is located in the Colville valley about a half-mile south of Chewelah, in Stevens county. The farm is bounded on the west, for a distance of about a mile and a half, by state highway No. 3. Immediately across the highway from the middle of the farm is the plant of Northwest Magnesite Company. The north two hundred forty acres of this farm had been purchased by Throop in September, 1944, and is referred to in the record as the “Oppenheimer” place. The south three hundred acres had been purchased by Throop in June, 1946, from Northwest Magnesite Company. The deed from the company to Throop carries a covenant running with the land, saving the company harmless from any loss or damage resulting from dust or other deleterious substances emanating from the magnesite plant.

Throop had paid a total of twenty-one thousand dollars for these five hundred forty acres, but retained the northerly eighty acres of the Oppenheimer farm for himself when he offered the remaining four hundred sixty acres for sale. After acquiring this farm, Throop had made certain improvements. He had moved onto the premises a house which the trial court found was of the value of seven hundred fifty dollars; connected it with community water and electric facilities; constructed a barbed wire fence around half of the property; and constructed a corral and cattle chute. At the time the Rummers visited the premises in the fall of 1946, one hundred eighty-six acres had been newly sown to winter wheat.

Throop was not present on the farm when Stansbury and the two Rummers looked over the place. The crops had then been harvested, but some of the winter wheat was starting to come up and was visible. Upon the conclusion of the inspection, the three returned to Rummer’s farm, where he signed an agreement to purchase the Throop farm. The purchase price was thirty-five thousand dollars. Rum *628 mer’s equity in the Wild Rose Prairie farm, valued at eighty-two hundred dollars, was to be accepted as the down payment. The balance was to be paid in annual installments of three thousand dollars each.

In the evening of that same day, Rummer was informed by his stepfather that he had better be careful “getting up in there.” The stepfather warned that “you are going to get into some dust,” and stated that the plant had given trouble ever since it had been there. Plaintiff then went to Stansbury and informed him that the “deal was off” because he had heard that dust kills the vegetation. Stansbury replied that “if there is such a thing, we will find out.” He thereupon took Rummer to see Throop, who was then living on what was known as the Sisters’ farm, situated on the northwest side of Chewelah. There plaintiff engaged in a discussion with defendant regarding the Throop farm, the gist of which will be referred to at a later point in this opinion. This discussion continued while they journeyed to the farm in question and made an inspection tour of the property.

Following this second visit to the Throop farm, Mr. and Mrs. Rummer went to the Ashley company office in Spokane and signed a sale agreement. This contract incorporated the same terms as were contained in the agreement to purchase which had been previously executed. Rummer vacated the Wild Rose Prairie farm and took possession of the Throop farm in March, 1947. Throop láter sold' the Wild Rose Prairie farm for eleven thousand dollars.

Rummer and his son spent their full time on the Throop farm until the fall of that year. Twenty-seven milk cows and a few beef cattle were acquired. Milk production was at first very satisfactory, with about nine ten-gallon cans being shipped each day. Shortly, however, the cows, which were pastured on the farm meadow land, began to get thin and sickly. Two or three died. Milk production dropped to around four ten-gallon cans a day. Rummer began selling off the sickly cows and buying others to take their place. Milk production, however, continued at a low level.

*629 It was the testimony of Rummer and his son that the difficulty with the cattle was caused mainly by scouring. They believed this was due to the cows feeding on meadow grass which-had been encrusted with magnesium dust. The testimony of several neighboring farmers tended to support this view. Defendants, on the other hand, produced a number of witnesses who testified that no particular difficulty of this kind had been experienced by them, and that scouring, if any, may have been due to the wet growth and canary grass on the low meadow land.

The Rummers also testified that, due to the dust from the magnesite plant, the grain crop was very poor. They estimated the production at from seven to ten bushels an acre. However, the record of their grain sales would indicate that production may have been twice that much. Their view that the grain crops were seriously affected by .the operation of the magnesite plant was corroborated by the testimony of several other farmers, some of whom had previously farmed a part of the Throop place. Defendant produced several witnesses, also including one or two who had farmed a part of the same tract, who believed the magnesite plant adversely affected only the thirty-five or forty acres closest to the plant.

Rummer held a sale on November 12, 1947, and disposed of all of his cattle and farm equipment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 P.2d 313, 38 Wash. 2d 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rummer-v-throop-wash-1951.