Bates v. United Construction Co.

253 P. 328, 81 Cal. App. 295, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 758
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1927
DocketDocket No. 4831.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 P. 328 (Bates v. United Construction Co.) 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
Bates v. United Construction Co., 253 P. 328, 81 Cal. App. 295, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 758 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

The action upon which the appeal herein was founded contained three counts, the first being for money had and received and each of the two others for rescission of the contract. Briefly, but in substance, the *298 findings of the court show the following basic facts: That all the defendants represented to plaintiff that if she would sign a certain building contract to be entered into between her and United Construction Company and turn over to defendants her equity of $8,500 in a conditional sales contract covering property theretofore owned by plaintiff, the defendants would finance, or cause to be financed, and construct the building referred to in the building contract which they wished plaintiff to sign; that plaintiff relied upon such representations, signed the said contract and turned over to defendants as first payment thereon the conditional sales contracts upon which was then due to plaintiff the sum of $8,500; that defendants Magoon and Salomon represented to plaintiff that each of them was acting as plaintiff’s agent and that no commission would be charged for services rendered in that behalf, but that each of the defendants received the conditional sales contract as a principal; that the building proposed to be constructed by defendants was never built nor financed by either or all of the defendants, or by any other persons; that each of the said representations made by defendants was false, and that upon such discovery by plaintiff she immediately demanded of defendants the return to her of the said conditional sales contract in the sum of $8,500; that plaintiff offered to return to defendants everything of value received by plaintiff from defendants, and served on defendants notice of rescission of said building construction contract, but that defendants refused to deliver or return to plaintiff said $8,500 conditional sales contract, or any part thereof, or any money paid or due thereon; that “defendants and each of them knew of the claims of plaintiff on the defendant the United Construction Company, and the United Construction Company and defendant W. G-. Magoon received, with the exception of $500, the entire benefit and total value of the $8,500 conditional sales contract; that the other $500 remaining value of the same was received by defendant Elmer Salomon; that each of them received the same with due notice and a full knowledge of the fraud on plaintiff’s claims.”

On such findings and on conclusions of law made thereon by the court, judgment was ordered in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants for the return to plaintiff of the *299 $8,500 conditional sales contract, or, as an alternative, in the event of inability of said defendants to deliver said contract to plaintiff, damages against United Construction Company and W. G. Magoon in the sum of $8,500, and as against defendant Elmer Salomon, damages in the sum of $500. It is from such judgment that defendants Magoon and Salomon prosecute the appeal herein.

The first point presented by appellants is that the judgment is invalid for the reason that “it is for the recovery of money as return of consideration on an action for rescission, while the judgment does not adjudge a rescission. ’ ’

As applied to a contract, the word “rescission” may be defined as the act of abrogating, canceling, vacating, or annulling it; or, as illustrated by section 1688 of the Civil Code, “a contract is extinguished by its rescission.” While in terms the judgment fails to use the word “rescission,” among other things it does decree that, in accordance with the findings of fact and conclusions of law, plaintiff is entitled to have returned to her the conditional sales contract which formed the subject matter of the action; which was a sufficient indication that, so far as the trial court was concerned, the building contract under the terms of which plaintiff delivered to defendants the conditional sales contract, was annulled and vacated. There is no “magic” in the use of a particular word to convey a thought, and it is apparent that the facts found by the trial court and the judgment rendered thereon mean nothing other than that the contract between the parties was “extinguished” or rescinded.

Appellants’ next contention, to wit, that “there is no conclusion of law stating that a rescission has been effected,” is subject to the same conclusions as are applied to the preceding point made by appellants.

It is next urged by appellants that because no direct finding was made by the trial court as to the value of the consideration paid by plaintiff to the defendants, the judgment is not supported by the findings. As a matter of fact, the findings contain many references to the value of the conditional sales contract, including the finding that on such contract “there was due and owing plaintiff the sum of $8500”; also that “there was due the plaintiff after one *300 installment had been paid, the sum of $8500.” Furthermore that “The defendants and each of them knew of the claims of plaintiff on the defendant the United Construction Company, and the United Construction Company and defendant W. G. Magoon received, with the exception of $500, the entire benefit and total value of the $8,500 conditional sales contract. That the other $500 remaining value of the same was received by defendant Elmer Salomon. ...”

While, strictly speaking, it may be said that none of such findings makes a clean-cut statement that the value of the conditional sales contract was $8,500; nevertheless it is clear that no other or different meaning could be attached thereto than that the intention of the court, as measured by the entire findings, conclusions of law and judgment, was that the value of such contract was the sum of $8,500. It is apparent that had any express finding been made by the court as to the value of the contract, it would have been that the said contract was worth $8,500. The rule is that where it satisfactorily appears that had an omitted finding been made it necessarily would have been adverse to appellant, he cannot avail himself of the failure to make such finding as a ground for a reversal of the judgment. (Hulen v. Stuart, 191 Cal. 562, 572 [217 Pac. 750]; Krasky v. Wollpert, 134 Cal. 338, 342 [66 Pac. 309]. See, also, 24 Cal. Jur., sec. 188, p. 944, and cases there cited.)

Appellants also complain that each of several of the findings of the court is not supported by the evidence. The first of such objections is to the finding “that said defendants and each of them received said conditional-sales contract as principals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 P. 328, 81 Cal. App. 295, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-united-construction-co-calctapp-1927.