Simmons v. Ratterree Land Co.

17 P.2d 727, 217 Cal. 201, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 362
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1932
DocketDocket No. L.A. 12823.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 727 (Simmons v. Ratterree Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Ratterree Land Co., 17 P.2d 727, 217 Cal. 201, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 362 (Cal. 1932).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

— Plaintiff, Verna Wilbur Simmons, brought this action to rescind a conditional sales contract whereby she agreed to purchase a lot situate in the city of Los Angeles from defendant Ratterree Land Company, a corporation, and to recover the sum of $3,582.37 paid by her on the agreed purchase price of $11,000. As grounds for rescission plaintiff relied on false and fraudulent representations alleged to have been made to her by defendants Grace Gunderson and George D. Lane, as agents for said land company. The court entered judgment against defendant Ratterree Land Company in the amount prayed for, from which said company prosecutes this appeal. Judgment was not entered against the defendant agents for the reason that they had received no part of the price previously paid which plaintiff sought to recover herein.

The contract rescinded is dated March 8, 1928. Plaintiff gave notice of rescission on April 5, 1929, and filed her *203 complaint herein on April 26, 1929. By the terms of said contract plaintiff was required to pay and did in fact pay $2,750, or one-fourth of the agreed purchase price of $11,000, within three months from the date of the execution of the contract, and thereafter paid $90 a month, as by the terms of said contract provided. The lot, purchased at a price of $11,000, is situate in an outlying district of the city of Los Angeles known as the Westwood district, in a tract subdivided by appellant. Said tract was the fourth to be subdivided and offered for sale by appellant in the immediate vicinity. At the time of plaintiff's purchase it was unsettled and unimproved, save that on certain streets curbs and gravel roadways had been installed. At the time of trial, over two and one-half years later, only one building had been erected in said tract. On March 8, 1928, the date of the contract, construction had been commenced on the buildings of the University of California at Los Angeles on the new site of said university, located about a mile and a half distant from plaintiff’s lot, but said university did not move to its new location until September, 1929. The property between defendant’s subdivision and the university site, also unsettled, had been purchased by other subdividers in anticipation of the growth and development which was expected with the coming of the university to the district.

Upon this appeal defendant and appellant Ratterree Land Company expressly concedes that the false representations which the court found induced plaintiff’s purchase are sufficiently established by the evidence. As grounds for reversal it relies on certain provisions in the contract of sale and in the deposit receipt and agreement signed by plaintiff, which, it is claimed, relieve it from liability for any fraudulent representations made by Mrs. Gunderson and Mr. Lane as its agents. These provisions are to the effect that the buyer has viewed and investigated the property and does not rely on any representations of the seller or its agents except those mentioned in the contract, and that the contract contains all the representations, promises and statements made by the seller or its agents which have induced the buyer to enter into the agreement of purchase.

As authority for the proposition that these provisions relieve it from liability, appellant relies on Gridley v. Tilson, *204 202 Cal. 748 [262 Pac. 322, 323]. Respondent contends that the law as announced in said decision does not compel a judgment for appellant on the facts of the instant case. It is settled beyond doubt, manifestly on sound grounds of justice, that a seller cannot escape liability for his own fraud or false representations by the insertion of provisions such as are embodied in the contract of sale herein. (Hunt v. L. M. Field, Inc., 202 Cal. 701 [262 Pac. 730] ; Ferguson v. Koch, 204 Cal. 342 [268 Pac. 342, 58 A. L. R. 1176] ; Blackwell v. Thomasson, 84 Cal. App. 784 [258 Pac. 724]; Long v. Los Altos Country Club Properties, 122 Cal. App. 116 [9 Pac. (2d) 600] ; Palladine v. Imperial Valley etc. Assn., 65 Cal. App. 727 [225 Pac. 291]; Ganley Bros., Inc., v. Butler Bros. Bldg. Co., 170 Minn. 373 [212 N. W. 602] ; 56 A. L. R. 1, with extensive annotation, 56 A. L. R. 13; also, annotations, 75 A. L. R. 1024, 1032, and 10 A. L. R. 1472.) Section 1668 of the Civil Code provides: “All contracts which have for their object, directly or indirectly, to exempt anyone from responsibility for his own fraud, or wilful injury to the person or property of another, or violation of law, whether wilful or negligent, are against the policy of the law.” Fraud in the inducement of a contract vitiates the entire agreement and destroys that consent which is essential to the existence of a valid contract. (Sec. 1856, Code Civ. Proc.)

It is the doctrine of Gridley v. Tilson, supra, that in certain circumstances the honest principal may protect himself from his agent’s fraud by inserting in the contract a provision the effect of which is to inform the purchaser of “the limitation on the agent’s authority to make representations not embodied in the written contract”. In that case, involving a sale of corporate stock at $1 a share, the agent, with the object of enhancing the value of the stock, represented that the corporation had obtained a permit from the corporation commissioner to sell the stock at $1.50 a share, and that it would be sold subsequently for that price. On the back of the subscription contract which the purchaser signed was a copy of the permit received from the corporation commissioner, from which it appeared that the corporation was authorized to sell at $1 a share. The subscription contract recited that the purchaser had read *205 Ihe permit on the back of the contract. The plain language of the permit, by reference made a part of the written contract, as well as the provision in the contract limiting the agent's authority, placed the purchaser on notice that the agent was without authority to represent that the corporation was authorized to sell at $1.50 a share, when the only permit exhibited to him was for a sale at $1 a share. Similarly, in Pease v. Fitzgerald, 31 Cal. App. 727 [161 Pac. 506], also a stock subscription ease, cited in Gridley v. Tilson, supra, the written contract issuing from the principal gave notice that the contract was based “on the printed literature and printed statements” of the corporation, and of the agent’s want of authority to make representations “not in accordance therewith”. In Fidelity etc. Co. v. Fresno Flume etc. Co., 161 Cal. 466 [119 Pac. 646, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 322], where a policy of insurance provided for payment of a certain premium, the insured was not permitted to rely on an oral agreement had between himself and the agent for payment of a different premium.

Before considering the application of the principles discussed above to the facts of the instant case, we wish to comment upon another principle expressly recognized in Gridley v. Tilson, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 727, 217 Cal. 201, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-ratterree-land-co-cal-1932.