Arendt v. McConnell
Arendt v. McConnell
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought for the purpose of obtaining a decree annulling an agreement of exchange between plaintiff and defendant. Plaintiff and one Edward A. Lesser were the owners in common of a certain tract of land in the county of Tulare. They jointly agreed with the defendant McConnell to exchange the above referred to tract of land for 3,250 shares each of the preferred and common capital stock of the Consolidated Concessions Company, and certain other considerations hereinafter referred to. The agreement was consummated by the execution and delivery to McConnell of a deed of the real property and the. delivery by McConnell to the plaintiff and Lessef o.f certificates for the required number of shares of the capital stock of the corporation referred to. Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that the defendant made certain false representations to him with regard to the value of said stock and the assets and indebtedness of the corporation which had issued such stock; that plaintiff believed said statements were true, and relied upon them, and by reason thereof was induced to enter into the agreement of exchange; that he later discovered that the assets and affairs of the corporation were not as represented by the defendant; that defendant knew the said representations were false, and that if plainth’ > *513 had known the same he would not have entered into the agreement of exchange; that upon the discovery of the falsity of said statements plaintiff rescinded the agreement and so notified the defendant, and then and there tendered and offered to return to the defendant the 1,625 shares of the corporate stock which he had received as his portion of the consideration exchanged for the deed of the land; that the said shares of stock constituted everything of value which he had received in the exchange; that the defendant had refused to comply with plaintiff’s demand for rescission, and that the title of the real property still stood in the name of defendant. The prayer was for a decree canceling, annulling, and setting aside the agreement of exchange; requiring defendant to account for the rents, issues, and profits of the real property; and, further, requiring him to execute and deliver to plaintiff a deed for his undivided interest in the real property; and for the recovery of damages. The findings of the trial court were all in favor of the defendant, and expressly negatived the making of any false or fraudulent representations by him, or the reliance by plaintiff on any such representations.
Appellant concedes that these findings cannot be disturbed, in so far as they are based upon “conflicting evidence, but claims that there is no evidence to support at least one of the findings. As a part of a long recital of representations which were found not to have been made by defendant, it is found that the defendant did not state or represent “that said corporation owned shares of the capital stock of other corporations which owned or had or would conduct concessions at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition to be held in the city and county of San Francisco, state of California, in the year 1915.” The contention of appellant that the above portion of the finding is contrary to the evidence is well founded, as it was proved without conflict that such representation was made by the defendant.
Appellant contends that the evidence in the record shows that the Consolidated Concessions Company did not own the shares of capital stock of the other corporations referred to in the findings, for the reason that the transaction under which said shares were purported to have been acquired by that corporation was fraudulent and void. It is .also urged that the illegality and fraudulent character of this transaction would have been more clearly established if certain additional evidence offered by the.plaintiff and erroneously excluded by the trial court had been admitted. Discussion of these contentions is unnecessary, for the reason that if all that is contended for by appellant with regard thereto be conceded, his cause of action still fails on account of the above referred to finding as to lack of reliance by him upon any of the representations made.
The judgment is affirmed.
Langdon, P. J., and Kerrigan J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district. court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on August 7, 1919.
All the Justices concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- M. ARENDT, Appellant, v. EMMETT W. McCONNELL, Respondent
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published