Vah Dah Dunshee v. Boadway

7 P.2d 325, 119 Cal. App. 678, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 150
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4471.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 P.2d 325 (Vah Dah Dunshee v. Boadway) 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
Vah Dah Dunshee v. Boadway, 7 P.2d 325, 119 Cal. App. 678, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 150 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

THOMPSON (R. L.), J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rescinding an exchange of properties on the ground of fraud consisting of a misrepresentation of the value of an apartment house.

*680 The plaintiff had been a resident of Honolulu until shortly before the exchange of properties which is involved in this suit. She had no previous experience in the apartment house business. She moved to Pasadena and purchased a home, which is situated on Hill Street in that city. This dwelling-house and furnishings were worth about $35,000. In May, 1927, she listed this property for sale with the defendant, The William Wilson Company, a realty corporation of Pasadena. This company was also the agent for the appellant, Evelyne B. Boadway, in the exchange of properties which is here involved.

The appellant owned the Beverly Apartments situated in the San Pasqual Tract in South Pasadena. She had owned and operated this property for several years. It was also listed for sale or exchange with the above-mentioned realty company. Mr. Plank, acting as salesman for The William Wilson Company, negotiated with the respondent with the object of selling her the Beverly Apartments or procuring an exchange of properties. Ah exchange of these apartments for the respondent’s home on Hill Street was consummated October 14, 1927. The respondent took possession of the apartments November 1st. The exchange of properties was made on the basis of a valuation of the apartment house and its furnishings, estimated at the sum of $96,000, which were subject to an encumbrance of $45,000: The respondent’s Hill Street dwelling was accepted at a valuation of $35,000. The balance of the purchase price of Beverly Apartments was paid by the respondent in cash and securities.

After operating the apartments for several months the respondent became convinced she had been defrauded. She was greatly disappointed in the receipts from the business. In an effort to refinance the encumbrance on the property, about May 1, 1928, she discovered that the apartments were valued at only approximately $60,000. For the first time she then made an independent investigation and discovered that the value of the property had been grossly misrepresented to her. She then consulted an attorney, and on May 17, 1928, commenced proceedings to rescind the exchange of properties.

The complaint alleges that the agents of appellant falsely represented to the respondent that the Beverly Apartments *681 and furnishings were worth not less than $98,000; that a net income of fourteen per cent, estimated on a valuation of $110,000, was realized from the property; that the apartments rented for $1400 a month, and in the winter-time produced an income of $1900 a month; that the building was in good repair; that the apartments bore a good reputation; that the property could be resold for $130,000, and that each of these- representations was false and was made with intent to defraud the plaintiff. It was then alleged the plaintiff was without experience in the apartment house business; that she had no knowledge of the value of property in Pasadena, and that relying upon these representations as true, she was persuaded to, and did exchange properties to her great damage. It was asserted she did not discover the fraud until May 1, 1928, and thereupon immediately served the defendants with notice of rescission. The material allegations of the complaint were controverted. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff.

The court adopted findings favorable to the defendants upon all of the specifications of fraud except that which charges the defendants with misrepresentations regarding the value of the property. Upon this issue the court found that the defendants fraudulently represented the property to be worth $110,000, and that the lowest market value thereof was $98,000; that these statements were made as declarations of fact with intent to deceive the plaintiff and not as mere expressions of opinion; that the plaintiff was deceived thereby and defrauded of her property; that the actual value of the property did not exceed the sum of $75,000, and that the plaintiff did not discover the fraud until May 1, 1928, when she promptly rescinded the exchange. A decree of rescission was thereupon rendered. The plaintiff was awarded a judgment for the sum of $12,901.67, representing her loss of the rental value of the Beverly Apartments from the date of exchange to the time of the entry of the decree. The judgment also requires the defendant Boadway to return 100 shares of the capital stock of the Standard Oil Company, which were transferred to the defendant as part purchase price of the apartments, and upon failure to return the stock, in lieu thereof the plaintiff is awarded the further sum of $7,549, which was *682 the market value of the stock. From this judgment Evelyne B. Boadway has appealed.

The appellant contends that the findings of fraud are not sustained by the evidence; that the representations regarding the value of the property were mere expressions of opinion, which do not furnish grounds for rescission; that the plaintiff had ample opportunity for an independent investigation regarding the value of the property, and that she may, therefore, not rely on the alleged exaggerated value thereof; that plaintiff did not, in fact, rely on these representations of value, and that she failed to act with due diligence in her effort to rescind the exchange of properties.

There is ample evidence to sustain the findings of fraudulent misrepresentations regarding the value of the Beverly Apartments. The valuation of the property was grossly exaggerated. The plaintiff testified that Mr. Plank, the salesman for The William Wilson Company, told her that Beverly Apartments were listed with them at a valuation of $135,000; that they were worth $110,000, but that he could sell the property to her for $98,000, which was the lowest cash price, and not a trading valuation. He told her his firm had been in the realty business for thirty-five years and could be relied upon. Mr. Ticknor testified that Mr. Plank, in the presence of the plaintiff, told him, “he was getting the Beverly Apartments [for the plaintiff] for $98,000, that it was worth $110,000. He said it was a wonderful deal.” The defendant, Boadway, also made similar statements to the plaintiff. From an entire reading of the record it seems quite evident these representations regarding the value of the property were not made as mere expressions of opinion, but, upon the contrary, they were made as positive assertions of fact for the purpose of deceiving the purchaser. The plaintiff had resided in Pasadena but a brief period of time. She had just come from Honolulu. She was inexperienced in the apartment house business, and was not acquainted with the value of properties in Pasadena. She made no independent investigation of the value of property. In fact, she appears to have been dissuaded from doing so. She visited the apartments prior to the purchase on only one occasion, and then merely *683 made a superficial inspection of some of the rooms. She testified in this regard: “She (Mrs. Boadway) showed us first apartment [number] 2. We just had a casual look through that. The curtains were down. The rooms we saw were all dark; we couldn’t tell much about them.”

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7 P.2d 325, 119 Cal. App. 678, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vah-dah-dunshee-v-boadway-calctapp-1932.