Vail v. Bailey

35 P.2d 37, 178 Wash. 490, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 691
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 10, 1934
DocketNo. 25005. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 P.2d 37 (Vail v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vail v. Bailey, 35 P.2d 37, 178 Wash. 490, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 691 (Wash. 1934).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

This action was brought by appellants herein to recover damages for alleged fraud in the sale and purchase, under executory contract, of a telephone system, and further, to enjoin respondents from enforcing a threatened forfeiture of the contract. Bespondents denied the allegations of fraud, and by cross-complaint sought to have the contract forfeited for failure to make the agreed payments. Trial before the court resulted in a decree adjudging that ap *491 pellants take nothing by their action, and that the contract he forfeited and cancelled. From that decree, this appeal was taken.

The assignments of error raise but one question, namely, whether the court correctly disposed of the two issues involved in the case.

On and prior to May 29, 1931, the respondents were the owners of the entire capital stock of Methow Valley Telephone Company, operating in and around Winthrop and Twisp in this state. Appellants, then residents of Portland, Oregon, had been engaged in, or connected with, various telephone enterprises in Washington and Oregon for a number of years. In May, 1931, they made a trip to Okanogan county with the view of locating and purchasing a desirable telephone business. In response to their inquiry, they were directed to the office of the respondents, where they introduced themselves to Mr. Bailey. On being advised of the object of their visit, Mr. Bailey stated that he did not care to sell the business which he was then operating, hut that he would consider a proposition if he could double his money. Respondents had purchased the entire capital stock of the Methow Valley Telephone Company about a year and a half prior to that time for seven thousand dollars.

After some discussion relative to the condition of the business, the appellants made a trip of inspection over the territory of respondents’ lines to determine the condition of the telephone equipment. Being favorably impressed, they returned in the afternoon, and then had a conference of some length with Mr. Bailey looking toward a purchase by appellants. It was in this discussion that the alleged misrepresentations, which will he referred to later, were made. At the same time, appellants were given full access to the hooks of the company, which they examined and from *492 which they made such notes as they desired. As a result of the conference, the parties, on the same day, entered into a preliminary written agreement, under which appellants were given an option to purchase the entire capital stock of the company and all the property used in connection with the operation of the business for fourteen thousand dollars, to be paid in specified installments. At the conclusion of these negotiations, appellants left for their home in Portland.

In order to finance the proposed deal, which called for the payment of forty-nine hundred dollars on or before August 1, 1931, it was necessary for appellants to secure the loan of a substantial sum of money. To promote favorable consideration by the prospective lender, appellants prepared, and had Mr. Bailey sign, a written statement on June 3, 1931, setting forth in detail the approximate revenues of the company and their sources. This statement, it is claimed by appellants, was, in effect, a repetition of Mr. Bailey’s original misrepresentations. The statement was signed by Mr. Bailey at Portland, whither he had gone to consult appellants with reference to the pending negotiations.

In the latter part of June, 1931, Mr. Vail, Sr., accompanied by Mr. Wade H. Dean, of White Salmon, Washington, made a second trip to Okanogan county, where the two men saw the respondents and inspected their plant. Mr. Dean was an experienced telephone man, and appellants evidently desired to have his judgment as to the value of the system that they we,re intending to buy. It was also from him that appellants expected to, and ultimately did, secure their loan. According to appellants’ evidence, Mr. Bailey reiterated to Mr. Dean his former statements as to what the revenues of the company had been.

*493 Shortly after this trip, the parties to this action concluded their negotiations by entering into a contract for the sale and purchase of the capital stock of the telephone company owned by respondents and the equipment used in the operation of the business. The contract as thus made called for a total purchase price of $14,077, of which $5,277 was paid at the time, $3,100 was to be paid in monthly installments of $100, with interest, beginning August 15, 1931, and a final payment of $5,700 was to be made on or before December 31, 1932. Appellants thereupon went into possession of the plant and business, and thereafter continued to make the monthly payments on the contract from August, 1931, to August, 1932.

In April or May of 1932, appellants discovered that the earnings of the company were not measuring up to their expectations, whereupon they complained to respondents that they had been deceived. There is some evidence in the case that, at about this time, Mr. Dean was threatening to sue both appellants and respondents because of alleged misrepresentations made to him at the time that he loaned the money to appellants; however, so far as the record shows, no suit was ever instituted by him. It also appears that, between May and September, 1932, appellants were negotiating with a Mr. Tyson for the sale to the latter of the telephone plant here involved. The correspondence between Mr. Yail, Sr., and Mr. Tyson reveals that appellants then considered the property to be worth twenty thousand dollars. There are repeated statements in Mr. Yail’s letters to Mr. Tyson to the effect that appellants were offering to sell only because they were negotiating for another plant more suitable for operation by two men.

During the time that appellants were negotiating with Mr. Tyson, they obtained from respondents an *494 agreement, by tbe terms of wbieb the.purchase price in the original contract was reduced by a sum of over fifteen hundred dollars, on condition, however, that the sum of two thousand dollars was to be paid respondents by October 1,1932, and other sums on specified dates, and on further condition that, if the payments were not so made, the contract should revert to its original terms. Although the negotiations between appellants and Mr. Tyson culminated in the execution of a contract between them, Mr. Tyson subsequently declined to go through with it, and that deal fell through about the first of August, 1932. This action against respondents was instituted immediately thereafter.

Reverting now to the misrepresentations alleged to have been made by respondents, appellants averred in their complaint and testified at the trial that respondents, through Mr. Bailey, had told them on May 29, 1931, upon the occasion of their first visit, that the revenues from the operation of the telephone system the preceding year had been $8,400, or $700 per month; that such revenues included $445 per month from two hundred paying stations, $100 per month for long distance calls over the system, and $100 per month for long distance calls beyond their line; also that the equipment included one hundred miles of pole lines and three hundred miles of wire.

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Bluebook (online)
35 P.2d 37, 178 Wash. 490, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vail-v-bailey-wash-1934.