Schwarting v. Artel

105 P.2d 380, 40 Cal. App. 2d 433, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 19, 1940
DocketCiv. 12659
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 105 P.2d 380 (Schwarting v. Artel) 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
Schwarting v. Artel, 105 P.2d 380, 40 Cal. App. 2d 433, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 126 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

From a judgment in favor of defendants, denying plaintiffs’ suit to impress a trust upon certain real property and for an accounting, plaintiffs appeal. Inasmuch as the appeal is based upon the insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings and judgment, an intimate familiarity with the facts will enliven the understanding and increase the appreciation of the conclusion at which we have arrived. After the entry of judgment defendant John G. Artel departed this life and his administrator was substituted in his place. All references are to decedent and not to the administrator.

The plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Schwarting, owned and operated a ready-to-wear clothing business in St. Louis, Missouri, during and prior to 1936. At that time deceased and his wife resided in Inglewood, California. Mrs. Schwarting and Mrs. Artel are sisters. In the year 1930 Mrs. Schwarting sojourned in California, where she visited with her said sister and achieved a desire to make her home in that community. Following her return to her city of St. Louis her new wishes were communicated by letter to her sister and to Mr. Artel. Inasmuch as a removal from the great metropolis of the Mississippi Valley was out of the question unless they could dispose of their business, she and her husband requested the Artels to report any opportunities for the exchange of the St. Louis business for property in California.

Subsequently Mr. Artel advertised in Los Angeles newspapers for an exchange of the St. Louis business, but none of the offers received therefrom was seriously considered. On the 28th day of May, 1936, one Harry Goodman, a real estate *435 broker, addressed a communication to Artel suggesting the possibility of an exchange of the Schwarting business for the Hartman Apartments in Los Angeles, and at the same time forwarded a copy of his letter to Schwarting in St. Louis, where the Artels were visiting at the time.

The Goodman proposition at once appealed to Schwarting and he directed Artel to investigate the property upon his return to California. This Artel did, as agent for Schwarting, and the negotiations between Artel and Goodman ultimately resulted in the exchange of the Schwarting business for the Hartman Apartments. But the purchaser had no knowledge of the apartments prior to the consummation of the transaction, except such as was transmitted to him by Artel. It turned out that the party who owned the apartments was also the owner of a bungalow court which occupied an adjoining lot. Both properties were encumbered with a single loan.

As the hour approached for the final arrangements Artel conceived the scheme of disposing of a small bungalow which he owned in Inglewood. It was on a lot with a 32%-foot frontage, its rental value was $18 per month and it was appraised at $2,000. It must be said, however, that this brilliant inspiration of Artel was the fruition of a proposal which came from Goodman on June 20, 1936, when Goodman by letter suggested to Artel that Schwarting take the Hartman Apartments subject to $22,500 and the bungalow court subject to a mortgage of $5,000 in exchange for the St. Louis business.

Without communicating said proposal to Schwarting, Artel wrote Schwarting on June 29 th for the first time after his return from St. Louis. His letter contained, in elaborate form, the features of the Hartman Apartments, giving it a gross value of $98,500, an equity of $76,000 and, after deducting ten per cent of that sum for repairs, it showed the value of the apartments to be $68,400. Further to enlarge upon the background of Artel’s dream of gaining profits from the transaction, it appears that when Goodman first proposed the said last-mentioned exchange of the St. Louis business for the Hartman Apartments, according to the broker’s testimony, he prepared at Artel’s request a draft of a contract providing for the exchange which had been suggested in Goodman’s letter of June 20th. In transmitting the pro *436 posal to Schwarting with the letter of June 29th, in a draft prepared by his own hand, Artel utilized" practically all of the phraseology contained in the draft of the contract presented to him by Goodman; but when it came to a description of the property, he included only the apartments and omitted the bungalow court which was a part of the proposal of Goodman in both his letter and his draft of contract for exchange.

Having signed the contract of exchange, Artel provided for an escrow in which the Hartman Apartments were to be conveyed to Schwarting in exchange for his St. Louis business, and as a part of the same escrow Artel instructed that the bungalow court, valued at $15,000, was to be conveyed to himself subject to an encumbrance of $5,000, and he deposited his deed as his contribution to the purchase price of the bungalow court. Also by the same escrow Schwarting’s business in St. Louis, valued at $35,000 was to be exchanged for the Hartman Apartments, value at $45,000, but subject to an encumbrance of $20,000. It is thus made to appear by written evidence prepared by him that Artel, while representing Schwarting, in an effort to negotiate the exchange of his St. Louis business for property of equivalent value in California, by exercising the powers of his agency managed secretly to exchange his little bungalow, worth $2,000, for an equity in said bungalow court of the value of $10,000, whereas Schwarting’s business worth $35,000 was exchanged for an equity valued at $25,000 in said apartment house.

Within a month after the close of the transaction the Sehwartings took up their home in California, where they soon discovered the facts above related and subsequently filed this action.

In support of their contention that Artel, while acting as agent for Schwarting, made a secret profit for himself out of the transaction without disclosing the facts, plaintiffs urge the familiar principle that the relation of principal and agent ■ is of a fiduciary nature and that in any transaction on behalf of his principal the agent is bound to exercise the utmost good faith and honesty. They assert that such an agent cannot take advantage of such fiduciary capacity and make a secret profit for his own benefit. (Whitnack v. Ellworthy, 63 Cal. App. 411 [218 Pac. 631] ; Curry v. King, 6 Cal. App. 568 [92 Pac. 662]; 1 Cal. Jur. 794, sec. 82.) There can be *437 no question of the soundness or of the applicability of said principle to the facts of this case. That Artel, while acting as agent for Sehwarting in a transaction where he was offered the bungalow court as one of two properties in exchange for the St. Louis business, came out with a personal net profit of $8,000 cannot be denied.

This leaves for consideration the question whether Artel disclosed all the facts to Sehwarting prior to his closing the transaction as the latter’s agent on July 29th. That Artel withheld a full disclosure of the facts from Sehwarting appears definitely established by the following uncontroverted facts:

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Bluebook (online)
105 P.2d 380, 40 Cal. App. 2d 433, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwarting-v-artel-calctapp-1940.