Vogan v. McLaughlin

342 P.2d 18, 172 Cal. App. 2d 65, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1924
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 15, 1959
DocketCiv. 23136
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 342 P.2d 18 (Vogan v. McLaughlin) 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
Vogan v. McLaughlin, 342 P.2d 18, 172 Cal. App. 2d 65, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1924 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.

Plaintiff’s first cause of action was for rescission of an agreement for the purchase of the Brentwood Motel. (The alleged ground: of rescission was misrepresentation as to the income from, and the value of, the motel.) The second cause of action was for money had and received in the motel transaction. The third cause of action was for damages for fraud in that transaction, in the event rescission could not be had.

In a nonjury trial, judgment was for plaintiff for $18,000 damages, on the third cause of action, against the defendants Mr. and Mrs. McLaughlin and Mr. and Mrs. Ford, who were the sellers of the motel. (Another defendant was the Inglewood Savings and Loan Association which held for collection, on behalf of the sellers, a purchase money note that was made by the plaintiff. The judgment provided that the amount of the judgment should be credited on the note.)

The said sellers- (defendants McLaughlin and defendants Ford) will be referred to herein as the defendants. They appeal from the judgment.

Appellants (defendants) contend that the evidence does not support the finding that plaintiff was induced to purchase the motel by reason of false representations as to the gross income from the motel for 1953 and 1954. They also contend that the court erred in compelling defendants to produce copies of their income tax returns; and erred in receiving the copies in evidence.

In October, 1954, plaintiff Mrs. Yogan purchased the motel and furniture therein from defendants for $118,000, and she paid therefor $35,000 in cash, and executed a note for $18,139.33, payable to defendants and secured by a trust deed on the real property. The remainder of the purchase price was the amount of encumbrances' which were then upon the motel property, which encumbrances plaintiff agreed to pay. ;

This action was commenced on October 3, 1955.

*67 The court found that plaintiff was induced to purchase the motel by reason of false representation made by defendants and their agent Mr. Findeisen, as follows: that the gross income from the motel for the year 1953 was $24,806; the gross income for the first eight months of 1954 was $16,876.50; the gross income from September 1, 1953, to September 1, 1954, had averaged in excess of $2,000 a month; the real and personal property were worth $125,000. The court also found that the gross income for the year 1953 was not in excess of $20,918.15; the gross income for the first nine months of 1954 was not in excess of $14,289.61; the gross income from September 1, 1953, to September 1, 1954, had not averaged in excess of $1,500 a month; the value of the real and personal property ivas $100,000; plaintiff had paid $118,000 for the property; plaintiff was damaged in the amount of $18,000 (the difference between the amount plaintiff paid and the value of the property) by reason of the fraud of defendants.

Defendants had acquired the Brentwood Motel in October, 1948. Thereafter, and until the sale to plaintiff, defendants Mr. and Mrs. McLaughlin operated the motel and kept the records of the income.

In July, 1954, the plaintiff, in response to an advertisement, went to the office of Mr. Findeisen, a real estate broker, and talked to him regarding the purchase of a motel. Mr. Findeisen showed the Brentwood Motel to her and said that the gross annual income therefrom was between $24,000 and $25,000, and that the purchase price was $135,000. Plaintiff told him that the income was “O. K.,” but the price was too high. Prior to September, 1954, Mr. McLaughlin had discussed the sale of the motel with Mr. Findeisen, and on September 23, 1954, Mr. McLaughlin listed the motel for sale with him. The gross annual receipts from the motel for 1953, as stated in that listing, were $24,887, and the selling price was $125,000. (The record does not show whether defendants had previously listed the property for sale with Mr. Findeisen.) In September, 1954, in response to plaintiff’s inquiry by telephone, Mr. Findeisen said that he still had the Brentwood Motel for sale. Plaintiff went to his office and said that she was still interested in the motel, but the price was too high. Mr. Findeisen replied that he thought he could get a better price for her. Then he and plaintiff went to the motel and inspected it. After they returned to his office and he had made a telephone call, he told plaintiff that he thought “he could get the place for $120,000,” and *68 that the income was “close” to $25,000 a year. On September 28, 1954, plaintiff told Mr. Findeisen that she wanted to see a “breakdown” of the costs of operation and to see “some proof of the income.” A “breakdown” of the costs of operation, which he gave to her, showed a total cost of $1,350 a month. He said that he could not show the books until she had made a deposit. He also said that the value of the motel, based on five times the gross annual income, was about $120,000. She submitted an offer of $115,000 for the motel, and she gave him a check for $5,000 as a deposit. He and plaintiff signed a deposit receipt which recited, among other things, that the offer was $115,00.0 and was “subject to proof of 1953 gross receipts as submitted.” He¡ told her that, he would have to “contact” Mr. and Mrs. McLaughlin. After making a telephone call, Mr. Findeisen told her that the Mc-Laughlins said they would have to talk to Mr. and Mrs. Ford. On October 1, 1954, he told her that the McLaughlins thought that they should have $120,000 for the motel. Plaintiff increased her offer to $118,000, and wrote the. offer on the back of the deposit receipt which she and Mr. Findeisen had signed on September 28. On October 2, Mr. McLaughlin, upon behalf of the sellers, accepted the offer of $118,000. Later on the same day, plaintiff and Mr. Findeisen went to the motel and examined the books, which were produced by Mr. McLaughlin. Plaintiff testified that Mr. Findeisen “called off” the monthly income figures from the books and she wrote the figures on slips of paper; then she “called off” the figures from the books and Mr. Findeisen wrote the figures on slips of paper. The slips of paper which were written by plaintiff were received in evidence as plaintiff’s Exhibits 5 and 6. The income, as shown by those exhibits, was $24,806 for 1953, and was $16,876.50 for the first eight months of 1954. On October 4, an escrow was opened, and immediately thereafter plaintiff and Mr. Findeisen went to the motel and again inspected the books. They checked the income figures and inspected registration cards. When they had inspected the cards for the letters “A” and “B” they stopped checking the cards. Plaintiff testified that, “Well, we got through the A’s and B’s, I believe, and we just stopped because I said I was perfectly satisfied that the income was there because I took it from the books twice. ’ ’

The escrow was closed on October 14, lj954, and plaintiff operated the motel from that date to and including the time of trial (June, 1957). The average gross monthly income *69 from the motel during that period was, as follows: for the last two and one-half months of 1954, $1,394; for 1955, $1,588; for 1956, $1,555.75; for the first five months of 1957, $1,395.88.

On September 30, 1955, plaintiff gave defendants a notice of rescission of the transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
342 P.2d 18, 172 Cal. App. 2d 65, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogan-v-mclaughlin-calctapp-1959.