United Investment Co. v. Los Angeles Interurban Railway Co.

101 P. 543, 10 Cal. App. 175
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 607.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 101 P. 543 (United Investment Co. v. Los Angeles Interurban Railway Co.) 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
United Investment Co. v. Los Angeles Interurban Railway Co., 101 P. 543, 10 Cal. App. 175 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

TAGGART, J.

This action was brought to enjoin the delivery of three deeds of right of way deposited in escrow by the plaintiff, to rescind the escrow and for the return of the deeds, upon the ground that the execution and deposit of the deeds were procured by false and fraudulent representations made by one of the defendants. The condition of the escrow *177 was the construction of a railroad from the city of Los Angeles to the city of Covina over the right of way conveyed by said deeds.

The misrepresentations as alleged in the original complaint were: (1) That the defendant Lahee had represented to A. W. Rhodes, the secretary and manager of the plaintiff, that C. H. Ruddock, the predecessor in title of plaintiff, and the owner of more than forty per cent of the stock of that corporation, had agreed to give the strip of land, covered by said deeds, for railroad purposes without any compensation therefor, whereas, in fact, Ruddock had agreed to give the right of way upon condition that he be paid the sum of $2,157.50, and that Lahee knew this fact and concealed it from Rhodes, to whom it was unknown at the time of the making of the deeds; (2) that Rhodes, on behalf of plaintiff, informed Lahee that plaintiff would not execute or deliver the deeds mentioned unless plaintiff could acquire a certain thirty-foot strip of land across the southern boundary of two lots designated as lots 33 and 34, and the railroad company would enter into an agreement to keep the watercourse on the north side of the right of way so that it could not cut a channel through a certain lot which plaintiff had agreed to sell to third persons; that plaintiff procured an agreement from the owners of the thirty-foot strip to sell the same to him, but that some of the other defendants and the railroad company, for the purpose of preventing plaintiff obtaining title thereto, procured and caused a conveyance of said strip to be made to the said railroad company; (3) that at the time of the delivery of said deeds it was represented to plaintiff by the committee who were to secure a right of way for the road (of which the individual defendants were members), that the railroad had acquired all the rights of way necessary to the construction of the railroad except those mentioned in the said deeds, and that the railroad would begin construction of its system of railroad along said line within twenty days after April 24, 1906. All of which representations are alleged to be untrue and to have been the reasons moving plaintiff to execute and deliver the deeds to the First National Bank as stated, and without said representations having been made the deeds would not have been so deposited, etc.

*178 By a supplemental complaint it is alleged that after the commencement of the action the railroad defendant entered upon the lands described in the deeds and constructed its railroad thereon, and in so doing destroyed a reservoir and injured other improvements of plaintiff on the strip of land to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of $8,000. While purporting to state only a supplemental cause of action, by this pleading some of the allegations of the original complaint are amended somewhat; for instance, the one relating to the first misrepresentation is restated so as to allege that the representation of Lahee as to the agreement of Ruddock to give the right of way was that Ruddock “had agreed in writing to give said strip of land” (the words “in writing” not appearing in the original complaint), and the allegations as to plaintiff acquiring the thirty-foot strip of land are more fully set forth. The prayer of the supplemental complaint is for the rescission of the escrow, for the return of the deeds and for damages for the trespass.

Judgment was for defendants and plaintiff appealed from the judgment, served the notice required by section 941b, and the record was certified up in accordance with the provisions of sections 953a, 953b, 953c. A reversal of the judgment is asked upon the grounds of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the findings, and because of certain specified errors of law occurring during the trial and excepted to by the plaintiff.

In respect to the facts constituting the alleged misrepresentation, the trial court found that Ruddock did agree to give the right of way free of charge, but not in writing, and that Lahee did not represent to Rhodes that such an agreement was in writing, but that it was made verbally, and as so made was true. That the committee did not agree to give Ruddock $2,157.50, or any other sum, in compensation for said strip of land, but that the enhancement in value of the other lands and premises of Ruddock and plaintiff by the building of the road was the consideration to Ruddock for the agreement; that the acquiring of said thirty-foot strip of land by plaintiff for drainage purposes, or the keeping of the surface water on the north side of the railway by the railroad company, or the commencement of work within twenty days, or that all the right of way other than the portion described *179 in the deed had already been acquired, were not conditions of the delivery of the deeds of conveyance by plaintiff, but that the only condition was that the said railroad should be built between the two cities named, over the strip of land described in the said deeds.

The amplified opportunity afforded by the complete detailed statement of the evidence and proceedings at the trial which is furnished by the record under the “Alternative Method” of appeal, which is here employed, to present to an appellate court the varied shadings of opinion and inferences that may be drawn from the evidence, may well suggest that the rule as to the conclusiveness of the findings of fact by the trial court should be somewhat modified. We cannot help thinking that appellant rests its hope of a reversal of the judgment largely upon this view. However tempting the opportunity to consider such, a change may be to counsel for a party appealing from a judgment, from the standpoint of an appellate court no good reason is apparent why the change of method should affect a rule so well grounded as the one which places with the trial court or jury the determination of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony, including the selection of one of several reasonable inferences that may be drawn.from the evidence shall be made the basis of the judgment of the court. It is true appellant in presenting its specifications of insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings disclaims any intention of presenting such an argument and may be unconscious of having done so.

The evidence discloses that for some time prior to the year 1903, the people of Covina and vicinity had been seeking to induce persons interested in electric railways to construct a line of electric road from Los Angeles to Covina, or to extend some of the lines running out of Los Angeles toward Covina to that place, and in the spring of that year a committee of thirteen persons, of which the defendant Lahee was chairman, on behalf of the people of Covina, with this end in view, entered into negotiations with persons representing the Huntington interests, which then operated such a road as far as San Gabriel, with the result that the latter agreed to construct such a road if the right of way therefor could be had without cost to the constructors. The committee undertook

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 P. 543, 10 Cal. App. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-investment-co-v-los-angeles-interurban-railway-co-calctapp-1909.