Watt v. Patterson

271 P.2d 200, 125 Cal. App. 2d 788, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1947
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 1954
DocketCiv. 15823
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 271 P.2d 200 (Watt v. Patterson) 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
Watt v. Patterson, 271 P.2d 200, 125 Cal. App. 2d 788, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1947 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

WOOD (Fred B.), J.

In October, 1947, plaintiffs purchased a house and lot from the defendant. The house contained a front apartment of six rooms and a rear apartment of four rooms. There was also a garage which had been converted into a bedroom. Defendant occupied the front apartment except two bedrooms which she rented to different persons. The rear apartment and the garage-bedroom were also rented.

In April, 1950, plaintiffs filed this action for damages predicated upon asserted fraudulent misrepresentation of material facts by the defendant. They alleged that the defendant falsely informed them that the premises consisted of five rental units, four of which were and all of which could be rented and that the legal and proper rent ceiling would result in the rental of said units at a total of at least $221.50 per month. The trial court found against plaintiffs’ contentions and rendered judgment for the defendant.

Plaintiffs have appealed. They contend that the court’s findings of facts are without support in the evidence. They claim the evidence shows that defendant represented that rental ceilings had been fixed by the O.P.A. for each of the five units, whereas that was true only as to three of the units. They also claim the very fact that defendant was operating this property as a rooming house was a representation by her to them that it was legal to do so, whereas they later found that a municipal ordinance prohibited such a use by restricting houses in this area to use as single-family residences.

The two units for which rental ceilings had not leen fixed were the garage-bedroom and that portion of the front apartment which defendant occupied. Rental ceilings had been fixed by the O.P.A. for the middle and the rear bedrooms of the front apartment and for the rear apartment. Plaintiff Conrad Watt visited the place at least twice before buying. *790 Defendant testified that she made a list of the ceiling rentals and gave it to Mr. Watt; that she gave him all her rent ceiling papers. Asked if she showed him the O.P.A. documents, she said “He had them all.” She said she never told Mr. Watt or Mr. Brown, the real estate broker who conducted the sale, that she had a ceiling from the O.P.A. for rental of the garage-bedroom; nor did she tell either of them she had a $45 ceiling or any ceiling for the front room or the portion which she was occupying. Asked if she made any falsehoods of any kind to Mr. Watt she said, “No, sir, I did not.”

Watt testified that defendant told him the part she was occupying ought to bring him at least $45; that she said she had a ceiling price on all the place there; she showed him some of the papers; she said she had a ceiling price from the O.P.A. on “most of those places in there”; “she didn’t say exactly how much the ceiling price on that thing [the front room], but she says could easily bring at least $45 a month. ’ ’ He said she showed him some of the O.P.A. documents. He did not believe she had any for that front room. “She had something in there she said she had renting it before,” had rented it for about $14 a week. He did not see an O.P.A. document in reference to the front room. He did see an O.P.A. regulation concerning the middle room and the rear room of the front apartment. And he saw the O.P.A. regulation concerning the rear apartment. He did not see any for the garage-bedroom. This testimony was not in all respects inconsistent with defendant’s testimony. His assertion that she said she had a ceiling price on all of the place, merely produced a conflict in the evidence which the trial judge resolved in favor of the defendant.

Plaintiffs, in their briefs, rely to a considerable extent upon a certain item which appears in the multiple listing contract prepared by Brown, the real estate broker: “Income—Gross $180.00+Apt. Expenses 25.00 mo. ‘Ceiling’ Rent Apt. 45.00.” Brown interpreted this item as meaning that rents currently received amounted to $180 a month and that the portion of the apartment occupied by defendant had a legally established rental ceiling of $45 a month. However, our attention has not been directed to testimony of Mr. Watt indicating that he relied upon any of these recitals in the multiple listing contract or that they came to his particular attention, nor have we found any. (See Bank of St. Selena v. Lilienthal-Brayton Co., 89 Cal.App. 258, 263 [264 P. 546], and eases there cited.) He testified at some length concerning what he *791 observed and what Brown and the defendant told him when he visited the property before buying it. It is a fair inference that to the extent that he relied, if at all, upon representations of the defendant, he relied upon the information which she orally furnished and the papers and documents which she delivered to him, not upon recitals appearing in the multiple listing contract. Incidentally, defendant testified that when filling in the items on the multiple listing contract Brown asked her, in case the front part were rented, if she thought it would be worth $45 a month, and she told him that in view of the fact that the rear apartment rented for $45 a month she thought the front would be worth that much, but she did not tell him there was a rental ceiling on the front apartment. In the absence of evidence or inference that Mr. Watt relied upon the recitals of the multiple listing contract, it is unnecessary to consider what those recitals would have meant to him if he had relied upon them nor what defendant’s legal responsibilities, if any, for the making of those recitals might have been.

Concerning the single-family zoning ordinance restriction, there was no express representation.

It was, of course, obvious that defendant was renting rooms and that she extended to some of the roomers the privilege of sharing in the use of her kitchen and other facilities. Brown said he told plaintiffs the property was being operated as a rooming house, that it was a dwelling house cut up into a rooming house. He did not tell them defendant had permission legally from the city or from the O.P.A. to operate a rooming house. He did not know what the zoning was. Defendant at no time told him. He did not make any representation to Mr. Watt as to zoning.

Defendant testified she did not know this property was in a single-family residence zone. She had never heard of zoning. She had never had an apartment house or a rooming house; this was the only property she ever owned or sold. Before she bought this place it was being used as a two-family residence. The family that owned it occupied the front apartment and rented out the rear apartment. After she had redeeorated the interior she began renting the middle bedroom. That was in 1946. Whenever she was making arrangements to lease one of her rooms she always consulted the O.P.A. and they gave her authorization. They never told her she could not rent the rooms.

*792 Asked if anything was ever said about the city zoning ordinances in the conversations between him and Brown or the defendant in connection with the sale of this property, Mr. Watt said “that’s something T never heard from either one of them.” He testified he had been living in this area since 1922, was familiar with this general area where he bought this property,, but did not know it was an R-l zone, a single family residence zone.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 P.2d 200, 125 Cal. App. 2d 788, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watt-v-patterson-calctapp-1954.