Wilson v. Zorb

59 P.2d 593, 15 Cal. App. 2d 526, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 92
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 17, 1936
DocketCiv. 9950
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 59 P.2d 593 (Wilson v. Zorb) 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
Wilson v. Zorb, 59 P.2d 593, 15 Cal. App. 2d 526, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 92 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*528 THE COURT.

Defendant appeals from a judgment after ' verdict in an action for damages arising out of the admittedly negligent shooting of plaintiff by defendant. The defense was a pleaded satisfaction and release, and this defense was good unless the evidence of plaintiff was sufficient to show that the release had been obtained by fraudulent means. We have to determine whether the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s implied finding of fraud, as a result of which the release was held to be invalid.

Plaintiff and defendant were physicians; they had been close friends for many years, intimately associated in social activities and in their professional work, but not in other business matters. With their wives they frequently stayed at each other’s houses and were in each other’s company a great deal of the time. This long-continued friendship was not breached by the shooting of the plaintiff. When plaintiff left the hospital where he was confined for a number of weeks after a serious operation, he and his wife were taken into the home of the defendant where they lived for four or five months. During that time plaintiff received from defendant as compensation for his injuries a consideration of some $9,000, and he executed, during this period, a written release of all claims for damages arising out of the shooting, and also a written covenant not to sue either defendant or his wife, which instrument was also executed by the wife of plaintiff.

The alleged fraud which plaintiff contends vitiated these releases consisted of statements of defendant with reference to the condition of his finances, and certain promises of financial assistance in the future, which it is claimed were made without any intention of performing the same.

The record contains evidence that certain statements of fact and certain promises were made before the execution of the releases. In discussing this evidence we shall state as proven facts the representations and promises testified to by plaintiff and his witnesses, and shall state such further facts, tending to disprove the charge of fraud, as were established without contradiction.

The shooting occurred on February 26, 1933. Plaintiff came to defendant’s home from the hospital about April 8, 1933, and the written release was executed May 17, 1933. *529 The covenant not to sue was executed July 5, 1933. Before the release was executed defendant represented that he had lost some $50,000 in stock market speculation; there was no evidence that this statement was untrue. He stated the stocks that he and his wife owned outright were worth very little; there was no evidence that this statement was untrue. He stated that his practice had suffered by reason of the publicity which he had received on account of the shooting; this statement was not untrue. He stated that he was being robbed by the operators of an oil well on a lot he owned in the Venice oil field, and that he was not getting royalty from the well. This statement was made in the month of May and it was true that during that month he received no royalties and it was also true that while royalties were resumed later and after the release was executed, at the rate of $200 or $300 per month, yet the evidence showed that the company went into receivership and the record does not disclose the length of time such royalties were paid nor the total amount thereof. He stated that the income from the oil well had been kept in a separate fund amounting to $50,000 or $60,000, which had been depleted by his losses and expenses, and that perhaps some of the amount had been dissipated by his wife. It was not shown how much money had ever been in such fund, if any, nor that the same had not been consumed in losses and expenses. He stated, according to one witness, that he owed the government $51,000 for past due income taxes, which he had succeeded in having reduced to $22,000. Plaintiff and his wife testified that defendant stated he owed the government $22',000 and that he did not know how he was going to meet the debt. About three months after the second release was executed, defendant paid the government $11,000 in settlement of its claim for past due income tax. No evidence was given as to the amount of the claim which the government was asserting at the time the settlement was made between plaintiff and defendant, nor was there any evidence that at the time defendant made such statements he did not honestly believe that he would be required to pay the sums the government was demanding. He stated that his property was mortgaged to such an extent that he could not borrow any money on it. It was a fact that one parcel of land was subject to a trust deed in the amount of $9,000, and no evidence was given as to the value *530 of the property, consequently it was not proved that defendant stated an untruth when he said he could not borrow more money on it. It was stipulated that he owned other parcels of land but no evidence was given as to the value of all or any part of it nor whether it was of such value or character that money could be borrowed on it. Plaintiff testified that he had overheard the wife of defendant state that their home had been mortgaged for $17,500, and that the debt had been paid down to $10,000. He also testified that defendant had told him that he, defendant, had asked his wife to mortgage the property and that she had said that it had been mortgaged for $17,500, and that the debt had been paid down to $10,000, and that she would not further encumber it, and plaintiff further testified that defendant had said to him that the mortgage was still on the property, this last statement being made in response to a leading question of his counsel. The facts with reference to this encumbrance were that the property had been subject to a trust deed of $10,000, which had been paid off shortly before the shooting occurred. No evidence was given as to the value of this property. Defendant represented that his finances were in “terrible shape”. In addition to the facts which we have already stated, it appears without contradiction that the expenses and losses of defendant which resulted from the shooting cost him $25,000. The statement that his finances were in terrible shape does not appear to have been a misstatement of fact nor the statement of an exaggerated opinion. No evidence was given as to any representation made by defendant as to his total financial worth, nor as to the total amount of his debts. Pie did not represent that he was insolvent nor that he would be unable to pay any judgment that could be recovered against him. He was a successful physician and surgeon with' a very considerable earning power, which facts, so far as the record discloses, must have been well lmown to the plaintiff. Defendant did not deny his liability nor his 'willingness to pay, nor his ability to pay, except by such general statements as that he never would be able to pay plaintiff enough to compensate him for his injury. We are unable to determine from the record what the financial worth of the defendant was, or what he represented it to be.

The promises which defendant made, and which it is claimed were made fraudulently, were the following: He *531 stated that he would pay plaintiff’s bills and expenses until he was able to resume his practice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P.2d 593, 15 Cal. App. 2d 526, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-zorb-calctapp-1936.