Tackett v. Croonquist

244 Cal. App. 2d 572, 53 Cal. Rptr. 388, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1609
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 1966
DocketCiv. 7918
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 244 Cal. App. 2d 572 (Tackett v. Croonquist) 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
Tackett v. Croonquist, 244 Cal. App. 2d 572, 53 Cal. Rptr. 388, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1609 (Cal. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

WHELAN, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment imposing liability for negligent misrepresentations following a non jury trial.

Plaintiffs Marvin F. Tackett (Tackett) and Elizabeth S. Tackett were owners of a motel property encumbered by trust deeds. They advertised it for sale or exchange. About the same time, one Lohr furnished to defendant Croonquist, a licensed real estate broker, the description of 73 acres of unimproved land that Lohr owned and wished to sell or exchange, on which he placed a value of $1,000 per acre. Defendant Carter was a licensed real estate salesman working out of Croonquist’s office, who was asked by the broker to look at the acreage, which was shown to him by Lohr. Lohr and Carter both had seen plaintiffs’ advertisement and Lohr, after seeing the advertisement, looked at the motel. Carter inquired of Tackett by telephone if the latter might be interested in an exchange for the acreage. An appointment was made, following which Carter showed Tackett what Carter believed was the northeast comer of a 40-aere parcel included in the total of 73 acres; the true corner of the 40-aere parcel was in fact almost 1,320 feet south and some distance east of the monument pointed out to Tackett. Twenty other acres of the 73-aere total were related in position to the 40-acre parcel so that their true location was different from what it would have been if the northeast corner of the 40-acre tract had been as pointed out by Carter.

Carter did not at any time deny that he had pointed out the corner as testified by Tackett, but claimed that it was the comer pointed out to him by Lohr, who owned all the property involved.

*574 Lohr signed an offer to exchange the 73 acres for the motel. The offer contained a provision for payment by him of a commission to Croonquist, who, by the terms of the offer, was described by Lohr as “my agent in negotiating said exchange.” Plaintiffs, believing that the 73 acres contained all of the 40-acre parcel, the northeast corner of which had been pointed out to them, and the related 20 acres, signed an acceptance of the offer, in which they agreed to pay Croonquist a commission of $8,500 for services rendered.

An escrow was opened, the instructions for which mentioned commissions to be payable by both parties to the exchange.

After the exchange had been consummated, Tackett sold some of the acreage before discovering the error in location of most of what he had acquired. He was engaged in improving some of the 60 acres that he mistakenly thought was his own when the error was pointed out to him.

Plaintiffs were given judgment against Croonquist and Carter for the difference in value between what they received and what they gave in exchange, for the amount of commission paid, and for the amount spent in improvement of the property they erroneously thought was their own.

Alleged Grounds op Appeal

Defendants contend (1) that a wrong measure of damages was applied based upon the difference in value of only a portion of the properties shown to Tackett and of those received by him, and that the evidence does not support the award on that point; and (2) that the judgment for the recovery of the commission paid by plaintiffs was erroneous.

Plaintiffs’ Theory of the Case

The original complaint, in which Lohr also was a defendant, sought rescission based upon fraud and mutual mistake, or, alternatively, damages for fraud, and for a failure to convey in accordance with the agreement of exchange.

The filing of a subsequent pleading by plaintiffs, entitled “Amended Complaint,” raised a question as to whether the original complaint had been completely superseded, a question settled by the trial court in confirming the assumptions of all parties that the “Amended Complaint” was intended as a supplemental complaint and in allowing at the conclusion of the trial, without serious opposition, the filing of an “Amendment to Complaint” to conform to proof which incorporated by reference portions of the original complaint. It alleged that *575 Croonquist and Carter acted as agents of plaintiffs “and were under a duty as fiduciaries to plaintiff.” It contained an allegation that as a result of the payment by plaintiffs of the commission, defendants were unjustly enriched in the sum of $8,500.

The court found that Croonquist was engaged by plaintiffs to act as broker in connection with the sale or exchange of the motel; that Carter was the agent of Croonquist; that Carter erroneously identified a part of the acreage; that plaintiff relied upon the erroneous representation; that Carter knew or should have known the error; that the motel was equivalent in value to the property plaintiffs thought they were receiving and had a value of $17,000 more than the property actually received; that Carter was negligent in not ascertaining and describing the correct location of the 73 acres conveyed to plaintiffs; and that defendants were unjustly enriched in the sum of $8,500 paid them as a commission.

Defendants’ First Contention

The award of $17,000 damages was found to be the difference between the value of the motel and the value of the land received by plaintiffs.

Defendants argue without foundation, therefore, that the award was for the difference in value between the property shown and the property received, and that the court failed to consider the value of all the property which was received. Defendants’ argument relies upon the evidence of an expert witness who testified as to the value of 60 acres received by plaintiffs and of the alternative 60 acres that plaintiffs thought they were receiving. As to the other 13 acres of the 73-acre total, plaintiffs received what they expected to receive. Implied in defendants’ argument is the assumption that the value of the 13 acres, as to which there was no testimony, might have brought up the value of the 73 acres received to the value of the motel. As a further development of such reasoning, they say that the effect of the court’s decision was to give plaintiffs the difference between what they received and what they expected to receive (benefit of the bargain rule) rather than the difference between what they received and what they parted with (the out-of-pocket rule).

While the testimony of the expert of the value of the 60 acres that Tackett thought he was getting was not material on the issue of damages under the out-of-pocket rule, no objection was made to the evidence. Being in the record, it could be *576 and was used as one step in the process of arriving at the difference in value between what was parted with and what was received by Tackett.

Tackett testified that the value of his equity in the motel was equal to the value of the 73 acres shown to him as what he would receive in exchange.

There was no direct evidence as to the value of the 13 acres, which is a constant in the equations. However, if the value of the 73 acres shown was equal to the value of the motel, and the value of 60 of those acres was $17,000 more than the value of 60 of those acres received, then the value of the 73 acres received must have been $17,000 less than the value of the motel.

Dependants’ Second Contention

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 Cal. App. 2d 572, 53 Cal. Rptr. 388, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tackett-v-croonquist-calctapp-1966.