Beardsley v. Clem

70 P. 175, 137 Cal. 328, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 559
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1902
DocketL.A. No. 1066.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 70 P. 175 (Beardsley v. Clem) 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
Beardsley v. Clem, 70 P. 175, 137 Cal. 328, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 559 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Rescission. Defendants had judgment, from which plaintiffs appeal on the judgment-roll alone.

The original plaintiffs were Clarence L. Beardsley and Grace M. Beardsley, his wife. Defendants were husband and wife. Aftér a demurrer had been sustained to the complaint, and pending demurrer to the amended complaint, plaintiff Clarence died, and plaintiff Grace was substituted as administratrix of her husband’s estate, and a supplementary and amended complaint was filed, which was answered, and the cause was tried by the court on these pleadings.

Plaintiffs owned a ten-acre tract of land near Redlands, and defendants owned a ten-acre tract near Downey. They exchanged deeds on December 1, 1898, pursuant to a verbal agreement previously entered into. On the night of November 30, 1898, a house which stood on defendants’ land was destroyed by fire.

The court found the following facts: That at the time the deeds were exchanged each of the parties believed that the dwelling-house on defendants’ land then existed; that the existence of said dwelling was an inducement to plaintiffs and a part of the consideration moving to them in the transaction; and that had plaintiffs known of the destruction of the house *330 they would not have made the exchange. On December 19, 1898, plaintiffs Grace and Clarence Beardsley served upon defendants a written notice of rescission and demanded a reconveyance of the land deeded to defendants by plaintiffs, which was refused by defendants. The land deeded by defendants to plaintiffs was “not of equal or nearly equal value with the lands deeded” by plaintiffs to defendants, “but the exchange as effected was not effected in any incompetency” (sic,—referring probably to an allegation in the complaint that Beardsley was non compos mentis), and was not inequitable or unjust. Prior to December 19, 1898, and after December 1st, defendants placed permanent improvements on the land deeded to them of the value of $358, for which they paid that sum, and among these payments was $25 paid to plaintiff Clarence Beardsley for fertilizing material used on said land, and he “knew of the destruction of said house when he received said $25.” Defendants had no notice or information that plaintiffs were dissatisfied with the exchange of lands until December 19, 1898. Defendants have collected $110.45 for insurance on said house so destroyed by fire.

As conclusions of law, the court said: “It is found to be equitable that if defendants shall within ten days from notice of this decision pay to plaintiff or deposit in court for her the amount of money received from such insurance, then a decree should be entered that the plaintiff take nothing; but if defendants shall not so pay or deposit said money, then that plaintiff should have judgment canceling said deeds on the payment to plaintiff of $358.00. Let a judgment be entered .in accordance herewith.”

Appellants’ contention is, that the finding that plaintiff Clarence knew of the destruction of the house when he received $25, and the finding that defendants collected $110.45 for insurance, have no support in the pleadings. The pleadings are verified, and the allegation of the answer was: " The defendants allege that prior to the nineteenth day of December, 1898, and subsequent to December 1, 1898, the defendants placed and erected upon the said real property [the property conveyed to defendants] valuable and permanent improvements of the value of $358.00, and for which defendants paid the sum of $358.00, to wit: $300 paid by the defendants for an addition built to the dwelling-house situated on *331 said last-named real property, $18.00 for cultivating and irrigating the last-named real property, $25.00 paid to said Clarence L. Beardsley for fertilizing material used on same, and $15 for other fertilizing material used on same.” Defendants allege that they have expended for permanent improvements since December 19, 1898, and for taxes, the sum of $952.08, but as this relates to expenditures since the notice of rescission the allegation cannot be considered. The allegation first above stated is deemed denied, and raised an issue which the trial court treated as a plea in estoppel, and on that ground held that, although plaintiffs had the right to rescind in view of the mutual mistake, they were yet estopped by subsequent conduct. In plaintiffs’ brief the opinion of the trial judge is printed, and in it he said:—

“But the obstacle in plaintiffs’ way is found in the facts which took place after the delivery of the deeds and before the notice of rescission. Until that time, and about fourteen days after plaintiff and her intestate learned of the destruction of the house, defendants, with the full knowledge of plaintiff and her intestate, made substantial and valuable improvements on the Redlands property, which they acquired from plaintiff and her intestate in exchange, said improvements amounting in value to $358.00. Plaintiff’s intestate also removed certain things from the Redlands property, which he claimed were not transferred by his (said plaintiff’s) deed, and sold certain fertilizers located there to defendants to be used in fertilizing said Redlands land, while said improvements were being made, thus indicating that he did not intend to rescind and encouraging defendants’ work and expenditure on the Redlands property.
“These things created an equitable estoppel, because it is unconscionable for a party to permit another to so improve property obtained in such a bargain, and then claim the property and improvements, even were he to pay the costs of the improvements.”

But it is contended that no estoppel was pleaded in the answer, and this is true in the sense that an estoppel eo nomine was specifically pleaded, with the usual averments of such a plea; and it is also true that the rules of pleading require estoppels to be pleaded. But it is also true that “if the facts upon which the estoppel rests be pleaded, so that the opposite *332 party may know its nature,” it is sufficient at least where the question arises under circumstances such as are disclosed in this case (Carpy v. Dowdell, 115 Cal. 677); and it was there also held that where no objection is made at the trial to evidence on the score of defective pleading the rule is well established that such a course is a waiver of a defect in pleading. The facts pleaded in the answer could have had no other object than that given them by the court, and whatever evidence went in to support the allegations must have been understood by plaintiffs to mean what the language used obviously and naturally imports. We cannot doubt that plaintiffs understood what defendants intended by alleging these facts, and to do so would be an impeachment of plaintiff’s intelligence.

The case does not fall within the class of which Ortega v. Cordero, 88 Cal. 221, is an example; but falls rather within the class reviewed in that decision, and some others, of which Horton v. Dominguez, 68 Cal. 642; Moore v. Campbell, 72 Cal. 251; Illinois Trust & Sav. Bank v. Pacific Ry. Co., 115 Cal. 285, and McDougal v. Hulet, 132 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
70 P. 175, 137 Cal. 328, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beardsley-v-clem-cal-1902.