Ryan v. Vawter

21 P.2d 990, 131 Cal. App. 722, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 817
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 12, 1933
DocketDocket No. 7485.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 990 (Ryan v. Vawter) 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
Ryan v. Vawter, 21 P.2d 990, 131 Cal. App. 722, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 817 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

DESMOND, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal taken by defendant from a judgment entered against her in the sum of $57,483.21 which the court found to be due plaintiffs as the net result of a transaction in which plaintiffs traded their ranch in Modoc County with certain personal property thereon for the Lady Ann Apartments and furniture therein located on South Rampart Boulevard, Los Angeles, property of the defendant.

Two actions were filed simultaneously by plaintiffs, husband and wife, the first claiming damages for deceit, the second damages under a warranty that furniture and other *724 personal property in the apartment house were unencumbered. Defendant answered the allegations of the first complaint under the number properly belonging to the second and vice versa as to the second complaint. In answering the first complaint, defendant set up a counterclaim charging fraud by plaintiffs and damages resulting therefrom. The actions were consolidated for trial, the court took a broad and general survey of the entire transaction and reached the result noted above by finding that, by reason of fraud practiced upon plaintiffs they were damaged in the sum of $64,000, but because of failure of plaintiffs to pay certain obligations which they had assumed in the amount of $6,516.79, the defendant should be credited with that amount making the net judgment against the defendant the sum first above noted.

After the trial closed and before findings were signed, the court permitted plaintiffs to file an “amended complaint to conform to the proof for damages for deceit”. Defendant complains that findings based on the pleadings as amended are erroneous in various particulars, pointing out that the amended complaint does not conform to the proof, but as to certain items, goes beyond any proof. One of the important findings is that the defendant practiced fraud upon the plaintiffs by representing: first, that the monthly income from her apartment house, summer and winter, at the time of the transaction and previously, was $3,000; second, that the annual income was $36,000; third, that the actual value of the house, land and furniture was $325,000; fourth, that the expense of operating the property amounted to $2,100 per year, plus cost of insurance. The court, among other things, also determined, “that the representations as to the value of said apartment house herein specifically found to have been made were not made as an expression of opinion, but as a representation of fact”; that income for the month in which negotiations opened, November, 1927, was $2,600; that the exchange was made on December 27, 1927; that Mrs. Mason, agent for defendant, informed plaintiffs that income for November and December and for each and every month of the year 1927 was $3,000 per month; that the Modoc County land and ranch of the plaintiffs was worth approximately $250,000.

*725 As a conclusion of law the court decided “that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover of and from the defendant, Eva M. Vawter, the sum of $57,483.21, the said sum representing the difference between the actual value of said apartment house land and furniture, to-wit: $88,100, and the value which said property would have had if the representations of the defendant were true, to-wit: the sum of $152,100, the sum of $6,516.79 being allowed to the defendant as and for the sums which the plaintiffs should have paid; ...” Commenting upon the findings above mentioned, we note that one of the plaintiffs, J. D. Ryan, testified that his agent, Mr. Gansneider, gave him certain information concerning the defendant’s property as follows: “ . . . who was present at that time? ... I think Mr. Gansneider and myself. . . . All right; what was said by you and by him at that time? He told me about this apartment, and showed me a slip with the listing on it, stating how much it brought in a year, the taxes, and one thing and another, and the dimensions and size of the lot and I says ‘Well, if it is bringing in that much money,’ I says ‘You will have to take care of the second mortgage.’ He said, ‘We will do it with that income.’ . . . He (Gansneider) said it was bringing in 3000 a month, thirty-six thousand a year. That was gross income, did he say? Yes, sir. . . . He said Mrs. Vawter asked $325,000 for it, and if it was bringing that income in, according to what she says, he felt the value was about right, and I says’‘Well, if it is bringing it in, I will make the deal, because I will get sufficient income to take care of the second mortgage, which they agreed to get.’ So on that understanding, I went and looked at the property.”

Mr. Gansneider did not appear as a witness nor was the slip to which reference was made in the above testimony offered as evidence. The court, however, admitted over the objection of defendant a slip designated as exhibit 5, reading as follows:

“Lady Ann Apartments,
447 South Rampart Blvd., Los Angeles.
Five story brick building, Beauty Parlor in Basement.
Price $325,000
1st Mtg. $125,000—-7Yz years to run at 7% straight.
Trust Deed $17,000 payable $1000 per month. Interest 8%.
*726 42 Singles, 6 Doubles, Lobby and basement.
Furnished.
Furniture Clear.
Lot 60x140, Lot worth $1000 per front foot.
Income summer and winter $3000 per month
Expenses except insurance $2100.00 per year.
Insurance $130,000. Du 0591.”

Mr. Frederick F. Mason, son of Mrs. Nellie Mason, defendant’s agent in this transaction, testified that he copied the data upon this document from a listing which had been in his mother’s possession but which was not produced at the trial. He stated that the original from which these entries were copied was signed by the defendant whose signature he recognized from having seen her handwriting elsewhere. Mrs. Mason had testified at an earlier date in the trial that so far as she knew no copy had been made of the listing which she had received from the defendant, and was not permitted to testify as to its contents. Later, when she was recalled to the stand after her son had testified, no effort was made to have her identify the typewritten entries made by him as a correct copy of her lost listing. No evidence was produced to show that Mr. Gansneider, agent for Mr. Ryan, or either of the plaintiffs ever saw this typewritten slip. We feel, therefore, that this document should not have been received as an exhibit and that its contents should have been disregarded. That it was not so disregarded, but, on the contrary, was considered as vitally important as a basis for one and perhaps the most important of the findings of the trial court, appears from the following statement made by the learned trial judge at the conclusion of the testimony :

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 990, 131 Cal. App. 722, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-vawter-calctapp-1933.