Arp v. Blake

248 P. 750, 78 Cal. App. 713, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 359
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 16, 1926
DocketDocket No. 3086.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 248 P. 750 (Arp v. Blake) 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
Arp v. Blake, 248 P. 750, 78 Cal. App. 713, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 359 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

*714 HART, J.

The plaintiff brought this suit in equity to enfi rce his right to contribution founded upon his payment of a certain judgment obtained by one Ranseh against the plaintiff, the defendant Blake and one Hewitt, in the sum of $1,050 and interest. The plaintiff was awarded judgment, from which this appeal is prosecuted by the defendants under the so-called alternative method. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 953a.)

The present is the final outgrowth of several other actions previously tried and determined, a recital of the history of which is deemed necessary to a clear understanding of the issue submitted for decision by this appeal. The respondent’s brief contains the following well-stated and correct account of the several actions of which the present is the culmination, and we will, therefore, adopt into this opinion the history of the litigation as it is so recited:

“On May 27, 1910, plaintiff James Arp made a contract with defendant Blake to sell her certain residential property. At the time pf making said contract Arp held the property under another contract of purchase, presumably with the owner, J. Ranseh, which contract had been executed by an attorney-in-fact; but it later developed that the owner had revoked the power of attorney, and Arp was unable to get title to deliver to Blake. Blake then brought suit against Arp and recovered judgment for breach of the contract to sell, and that case was finally decided against Arp by this (Supreme) court, the decision being reported in Blake v. Arp, 180 Cal. 144 [179 Pac. 683]. The details of that litigation are set forth in paragraph 1 of the complaint in this case. The judgment in that case will be referred to herein as the ‘Blake-Arp judgment. ’

“Shortly after the commencement of the suit of Blake vs. Arp, the owner, J. Ransch, commenced a suit against Blake, Arp and one Hewitt for the purpose of recovering the value of the use and occupation of said property for the time Blake occupied the same under the Arp contract. (The date of the commencement of this action is given in the Clerk’s Transcript as March 17, 1919; but this is obviously a mistake, as it appears elsewhere in the said transcript that judgment in said case was secured April 11, *715 1916.) This case also found its way into the books, the appeal thereon being reported as Ransch v. Arp, 39 Cal. App. 580 [179 Pac. 694]. That judgment was against Arp, Blake and Hewitt for the use and occupation of the property, and the case is particularly described in paragraph II of the complaint herein. That judgment will be referred to in this brief as the Ransch-Blake judgment.

“The above mentioned litigation having thus resulted, Arp contended that the last mentioned judgment was the personal and individual obligation of Blake by reason of her having secured the benefits of the said use and occupation, and that she ought to pay it, or, in case he should be compelled to pay it, that he should be allowed a set-off on the Blake-Arp judgment which Blake held against him. He accordingly moved for a credit in the case of Blake vs. Arp, and the lower court allowed a set-off of one-third of the Ransch-BIake judgment; but both parties appealed and the case was reversed on the ground that contribution could not be enforced by motion. (Blake v. Arp, 48 Cal. App. 715 [192 Pac. 452].)

“Arp then commenced the present action for contribution or a set-off against the Blake-Arp judgment, having theretofore been compelled to pay the Ransch-BIake judgment. Defendant Cohn had received an assignment of the Blake-Arp judgment and was accordingly made a party defendant. The first cause of action set forth in our complaint relates to the matters above mentioned and asks for credit on the Blake-Arp judgment of the amount which plaintiff had been compelled to pay on the Ransch-BIake judgment. The complaint also contained two other causes of action growing out of garnishments on Arp by creditors of Blake, but these causes fell by the wayside on demurrer in the trial court.

“A trial was had on the first cause of action which resulted in a judgment in favor of Arp against Blake but not against Cohn. Plaintiff appealed to this (the Supreme) Court and the case was transferred to the District Court of Appeal for the Second District for hearing, where it was decided August 2, 1923, by Judge Shenk. (Arp v. Blake, 63 Cal. App. 362 [218 Pac. 773].) By this opinion the decision of the trial court was reversed, and it was *716 held that Arp’s right to a set-off was valid and enforceable against Cohn as the assignee of Blake unless there had been an estoppel in favor of Cohn, and ordered the case back for trial on the issue of estoppel alone. The case was retried on that question and judgment went in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Cohn for the full amount of the Ransch-Blake judgment and interest, the defendant Cohn, as assignee of Blake, having enforced payment by Arp of the full amount of the Blake-Arp judgment during the pendency of the former appeal herein.”

The facts set forth in the complaint, as is to be inferred from the foregoing statement, are substantially as they are given in said statement. The answer of Cohn, besides admitting and denying certain of the allegations of the complaint, sets up a special defense by way of an estoppel founded upon the following alleged facts: That immediately prior to the purchase of the Blake-Arp et al. judgment by said Cohn and the assignment thereof to him, said Cohn met and conversed with the plaintiff herein regarding said judgment; that the plaintiff stated and represented to Cohn that he (plaintiff) “was about to pay off the said judgment owing to the said Elizabeth Blake, and that if he, the said defendant Charles Cohn, would purchase said judgment the said James Arp would shortly thereafter pay the said Charles Cohn the amount of said judgment, and defendant Charles Cohn, believing him and relying upon said representation of the said James' Arp, did purchase said judgment and obtain an assignment thereof, and pay the sum of $2,550.00 to the said defendant, Elizabeth Blake, therefor, that he would not have purchased the same if the said James Arp had not made said representation to him, and that, therefore, the said plaintiff, James Arp, is and should be estopped from claiming ' contribution or right to subrogation or contribution against this defendant, Charles Cohn.”

■ As before stated, the special defense thus set up involved • or tendered the only issue litigated below in the present trial. The trial court found against the defendant Cohn upon his plea of estoppel.

It appears from the evidence that, prior to the date of the purchase by Cohn and the assignment to him of the *717 Blake-Arp judgment, to wit, June 3, 1919, said judgment being for the sum of $2,100, the judgment-creditor Blake was indebted ■ to Cohn for and on account of money advanced by the latter to the former, in a sum exceeding $3,000; that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 750, 78 Cal. App. 713, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arp-v-blake-calctapp-1926.