Armstrong v. Lassen Lumber & Box Co.

269 P. 453, 204 Cal. 529, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 717
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1928
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11479.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 269 P. 453 (Armstrong v. Lassen Lumber & Box Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Lassen Lumber & Box Co., 269 P. 453, 204 Cal. 529, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 717 (Cal. 1928).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

This action was brought to recover damages growing out of the sale on March 24, 1922, by defendant to plaintiff of a used 80-horsepower return tubular boiler.

The complaint, as finally amended, in substance alleged that prior to March 10, 1922, plaintiff informed defendant that he was about to enter into a contract with a customer, viz., Leal & Sons Lumber Company, for the sale to said company of one 80-horsepower return tubular boiler, in good condition, built for 140 pounds per square inch working pressure, with all necessary fittings, etc.; that defendant stated it was the owner of a boiler of the kind and character specified, which it would sell to plaintiff for the sum of $800; that plaintiff, relying upon the honesty and integrity of defendant and upon the truth and correctness of said representations, on March 10, 1922, entered into an agreement in writing to sell said boiler, complete with fittings, to said Leal & Sons for the sum of $1,575; that on March 24, 1922, plaintiff paid defendant said purchase price of $800 and received from it a bill of sale for said boiler; that immediately thereafter said boiler was dismantled and shipped by freight from Susanville, where it was located, to Oroville, whence it was hauled by wagon to the sawmill of Leal & Sons, at a hauling cost of $140; that plaintiff was informed by said Leal & Sons that upon arrival they found said boiler was not such a one as they were entitled' to receive under their contract; that it was old, wornout, bagged, leaky, damaged, had a lamination, and was valueless; that plaintiff thereupon sent mechanics and a state inspector to try to repair and to inspect it, at a total cost of $232.10; that said inspector condemned said boiler; that plaintiff was unaware of its defective and useless condition and thereafter settled and compromised the demand of Leal & Sons against it by furnishing them, in lieu of said defective boiler, a used water tube boiler (a boiler of a different type), procured at a cost to plaintiff of $1,933.18, *531 for which said Leal & Sons paid only $1,575, all to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $2,305.28. The first count of said complaint alleged a cause of action for deceit; the second for breach of contract.

The answer denied the material allegations of the complaint, with the exception of sale of the boiler and execution of bill of sale therefor. The trial court found that defendant had misrepresented to plaintiff the condition of said boiler, which was, in fact, worthless and of no value, and fixed damages at $2,113.29, being $1,933.18, cost of the substituted water tube boiler and its erection, plus $180.11, plaintiff’s expenses in endeavoring to service the old boiler. Judgment for said sum was accordingly entered in favor of plaintiff and there was also included therein an allowance of interest at seven per cent per annum on the purchase price of $800 from March 24, 1922, and costs. Defendant appealed from the judgment and also from an order made after entry thereof allowing plaintiff to amend the second amended complaint.

It appears that during the trial plaintiff was granted permission to amend its second amended complaint to conform to proof. However, through neglect or inadvertence, the formal amendment was not engrossed and made part of the record until after this appeal was taken, at which time it was filed under order of the trial court on motion of plaintiff after hearing thereon. The amendment set forth the facts with respect to replacement of the boiler sold by defendant with a used water tube boiler. The propriety of permitting the amendment is not questioned so much as is the fact that plaintiff had more than a reasonable time within which to file it; that no showing was made of inadvertence or excusable neglect explaining his failure to do so, and by virtue of entry of the judgment and the appeal therefrom the court lost jurisdiction to entertain plaintiff’s motion.

This was a matter for exercise of the discretion of the trial court, and it does not appear that defendant suffered prejudice by its action. Courts are liberal in the allowance of amendments in order that pleadings may conform to proof, and here said amendment was offered and allowed at the time the proof was taken. The fact that the formal pleading was not made a part of the record until later is *532 immaterial under the circumstances. This very question arose in the case of Stark v. Wellman, 96 Cal. 400, 402, 403 [31 Pac. 259], and the court there said: “Although plaintiff announced that the amendment would be made, the amendment was not actually made until after the verdict and the entry of judgment. This is assigned as error, and the ruling is brought here by a bill of exceptions. But here, I think, we can plainly see that the defendant was not injured. . . . Here we know that the proposed amendment did not and could not have benefited the plaintiff or injured the defendant. It did not change the character of the complaint in any respect. But if its effect had been to help the complaint, the defendant still was not injured, for he tried his case with reference to it, and was not prejudiced by the fact that it was not reduced to writing until afterwards.”

Appellant contends that the findings as to fraud and misrepresentation cannot be sustained by the evidence nor can the judgment be upheld upon any theory of breach of warranty; also that, admitting the finding of fraud to be sustained by the.evidence, the measure of damages adopted by the trial court was nevertheless incorrect. To our mind the latter position is sound and necessitates a reversal of the judgment; hence this contention alone will receive our consideration.

There is some conflict in the evidence, it is true, but it can scarcely be questioned that the record furnishes ample support for the conclusion that the boiler, instead of being a used boiler in good condition for 140 pounds working pressure, was in fact, by reason of burnt out rivets, leaks, bags and a lamination, defective and practically valueless. The sufficiency of the evidence to warrant a finding of fraud is open to debate, but, as above stated, we need not definitely determine this contention. These observations are far from holding, however, that defendant should be forced to bear the burden of plaintiff’s entire loss by reason of its dealings with a third party by a written contract antedating the contract with defendant, and to which defendant was not a party and of which it had no specific knowledge. The most that was told defendant by plaintiff’s agent was that plaintiff desired to purchase the boiler for resale and later defendant was given the name of the company to which said boiler should be shipped. And in this behalf *533 said agent misrepresented the intended resale price, stating to defendant that it was to be $900 (which would give a profit of $100), instead of $1,575, the price mentioned in the Leal & Sons contract.

The bill of sale executed by defendant described the article as follows: “One butt-strap boiler 60" in diameter by 16' long for 140 pounds working pressure complete with Preachings, stack, front grates, and full complement of fittings. Boiler now located at our plant at Susanville, California. Above consideration includes delivery of boiler on cars in good condition at Susanville.”

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Bluebook (online)
269 P. 453, 204 Cal. 529, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-lassen-lumber-box-co-cal-1928.