Woodson v. Winchester

117 P. 565, 16 Cal. App. 472, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 279
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 17, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 783.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 117 P. 565 (Woodson v. Winchester) 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
Woodson v. Winchester, 117 P. 565, 16 Cal. App. 472, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 279 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

*473 CHIPMAN, P. J.

This is an action to foreclose defendant’s right to purchase the lands described in the complaint.

A second amended answer was attacked by a motion to strike out many of its averments and by a general and special demurrer. The motion was granted as to a considerable portion of the answer and, after it had been thus shorn, the demurrer was sustained. Defendant making no further attempt to answer, plaintiff submitted his proofs and had judgment as prayed for in the complaint. The appeal is from this judgment on bill of exceptions.

The contract bears date September 16, 1907, and relates to certain lots in Maywood Colony, near Corning, Tehama county, for which defendant agreed to pay the sum of $5,500, in installments, $500 upon the execution of the contract. $1,000 on April 1, September 1 and December 1, 1908, and the balance, $2,000, on September 1, 1910, with interest at eight per cent per annum. It was alleged in the complaint that, on October 26, 1908, $2,100 had been paid on account of the principal and $400 on account of interest to that date, and that no further payments have been made. The complaint was filed April 14, 1909, and plaintiff prayed that defendant be foreclosed from all right to purchase said land unless all sums found to be due on said contract, including costs of suit, be paid within such reasonable time as the court may allow. No question is raised as to the terms of the contract or as to the payments made thereon. Defendant’s defense rests alone on Ms averments of fraud.

Defendant is not seeking to rescind the contract. He states in his brief that he elects to retain what he has received under the contract and seeks to recover damages for the injury he has sustained from the alleged deceit; i. e., he affirms the contract and consents to be bound by its provisions, but does not waive his claim for damages arising from the alleged fraud collateral to the contract. His defense appears to be that he has been damaged $4,500, of which he asks that $2,500 be offset against plaintiff’s demand, and that he have judgment for $2,000 and retain the land. Obviously, the defense rests entirely on the alleged fraudulent conduct of plaintiff, and, before such a defense will be entertained by a court of equity, it must be shown with that fullness and particularity *474 of facts and circumstances as is required by settled rules of pleading. 0

That sham, redundant and irrelevant matter in a pleading may be stricken out is a general rule and is established- by the Code of Civil Procedure, section 453.

Paragraph II of the answer cannot for a moment be said to fall within any class of fraudulent representations or as statements by way of inducement to purchase at all reprehensible. They relate to lands comprising a colony and' not to the specific lands in question. That defendant, as he says in paragraph III, “read them [-the representations] deeply and carefully and that he became satisfied therefrom that such statements were really true,” adds no force- to the pleading, nor do the statements referred to in paragraph IV. The “Maywood Colony Advocate” was published for the “purpose of inducing persons residing in the eastern states to sell their properties there and come to Maywood Colony and purchase lands therein from plaintiff.” This general, purpose may have been, and probably was a very laudable one. Paragraph V of the answer was not wholly emasculated. Looking at the clauses stricken out, w-e fail to see their necessary relevancy to the charge of fraud. What mattered it that the land had never before been offered for sale ,• or that unless defendant purchased quickly he might lose the opportunity; or that plaintiff had kept this particular land as a “show place”; or that it had his personal attention; or that the ten acres not in orchard was ideal grape land, and plaintiff had kept it to go with the ten acres of orchard and that the two pieces must go together; or that fruit grown on the land had ready sale an-d' commanded exceptionally high prices and was sold in advance of delivery at large profit? Defendant, according to his answer which stands, was taken to the land- “in an automobile—-plaintiff’s automobile”—an unimportant fact, and he says “that plaintiff stopped his automobile on the land . . . pointing defendant’s attention to said land . . . and requested defendant to purchase that particular land1,” and it was then, as they rested in the automobile, that plaintiff made the statements set out in the answer, som-e of which the court allowed to stand and struck -out the others. Paragraphs VI, VII and VIII remained undisturbed by the motion. Paragraph IX suffered badly at the hands of the court, *475 but we cannot see that defendant’s case suffered, for the matter stricken out had no necessary connection with the specific fraud on which alone defendant had any right to rely. The averments appear to be an attack upon the verity of the publications concerning the Maywood Colony lands, which publications are not alleged to have been directed.to the particular land in question but to lands generally of the colony." The representations are substantially the same as are set forth in paragraph V. The paragraph closes with what apparently was intended to cover the entire catalogue of. representations, which are denounced as “wholly and entirely false and untrue in every material respect” and were known by plaintiff “to be false and untrue in every material respect.” This latter averment remains, but something more was required of the pleader than this. t He should have pointed out what was material.

Paragraph X remains but XI went out, we suppose because the court thought it rather remote to make plaintiff pay defendant damages because the defendant gave credence to the “Maywood Colony Advocate” and sold out his business in New London and took a chance in Corning. We incline to agree with the trial court that the averments contributed nothing material to the answer.

Part of paragraph XII, to wit, marked a, b and e, went out probably because—(a) there were no averments to support a claim for the difference between the actual value of the property and the amount for which it was sold; (b) and (c) because too remote.

We think the demurrer was rightly sustained to the remaining portions of the answer. The recital of facts leading up to the alleged statements in paragraph V, subdivisions d, e and h, is plainly a narrative of which fraud is not predicated. Of the representations stated in these subdivisions,, it is averred that defendant did not know whether or not they were true, but had entire confidence in plaintiff and believed him, and was thereby induced to agree to purchase the land, and this the pleader says is evidenced by the fact that the contract was “executed the day following”; that after he had made all the payments he discovered “that all said statements so made by plaintiff . . . were wholly false and fraudulent and! defendant alleges that they were and are in *476 fact wholly false and fraudulent,” which was well known to plaintiff and were made by him “to induce defendant to pay $5,500 for the land herein involved when in fact it was not at higher value than $1,000” and is not now of higher value than $1,000.

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Bluebook (online)
117 P. 565, 16 Cal. App. 472, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodson-v-winchester-calctapp-1911.