Butler v. Delafield

82 P. 260, 1 Cal. App. 367, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 34
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 25, 1905
DocketNo. 36.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 P. 260 (Butler v. Delafield) 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
Butler v. Delafield, 82 P. 260, 1 Cal. App. 367, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 34 (Cal. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Appeal from a judgment of the superior court of Fresno County in favor of defendants and from •an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. The complaint demands damages for the breach of a contract to take thirty carloads of dried prunes and advance thereon seventy-five per cent of their market value, and to sell the same for a commission of two and one half per cent, and account for the proceeds received from the sale of the prunes, less advances, expenses, and commissions. It is alleged that plaintiff shipped the thirty carloads of dried prunes to defendants, and that defendants received and made the agreed advances on fifteen carloads, but refused to receive or sell or make advances on the remaining fifteen carloads, but left them uncared for, whereby they deteriorated in value, and plaintiff was compelled to employ other persons to sell the same, to his damage in the sum of fifty-five hundred dollars.

In their supplemental and amended answer defendants •deny making any agreement “that they would take and receive, or take or receive, thirty carloads of dried prunes on commission, or advance to the plaintiff seventy-five per cent of the market value thereof, or care for or sell said prunes at the best or any market prices obtainable therefor, . . . less any actual expenses, . . . and the advances made to plaintiff on account thereof, and a commission of two and -one half (2%) per cent of the amount received therefor, and denies that said two and one half per cent was to be retained by said defendants as full or any compensation for the .services of said defendants in caring for and selling said prunes”; deny that plaintiff shipped to defendants “the thirty carloads of dried prunes in accordance with the contract set forth in said complaint,” and that “as to the other difteen carloads of said prunes” deny that defendants refused *370 to honor or accept or pay plaintiff’s drafts for advances of “seventy-five per cent of the market value thereof,” or that defendants refused “to receive or take, or accept or care for or sell the same, or permitted or allowed said fifteen carloads of prunes” to remain uncared for until they were damaged, or that plaintiff suffered damage thereby.

For a second defense, and in bar of the action, the answer . alleges that defendants sued plaintiff in New York for $1,351.31, being the balance alleged to be due them for moneys advanced and paid for services performed by them for plaintiff, “under and in pursuance of the contract set forth in the complaint in this action,” and that in the New York action plaintiff set up as a counterclaim “the same cause of action” against the defendants herein “as is alleged against them in the complaint in the present action,” and that judgment was rendered in the New York action in favor of defendants herein (plaintiffs therein) and that said judgment has become final.

For a “third defense” the answer sets up as a counterclaim the judgment in the New York action and alleges that “no part thereof has been paid.” The pleadings are verified. The present plaintiff demurred generally to the answer, and to certain portions thereof he demurred on the further grounds of ambiguity and uncertainty. The demurrer was overruled, and the cause was tried by the court without a jury. Plaintiff offered no evidence in support of his complaint, whereupon defendants introduced in evidence an authenticated copy of the judgment-roll and the judgment rendered in their favor in the New York action and the deposition of the defendant McGovern as to the non-payment of the New York judgment. The court gave judgment in favor of the present defendants for the amount of the New York •judgment set up in the counterclaim. To the New York judgment, or to its validity, no objection was made when introduced and no attack is made upon it in plaintiff’s brief. Objection to McGovern’s deposition was made, as'will be hereafter noticed.

In its findings the court found the true name of John Doe Carey to be Frederick F., and that defendants “are and at all and singular the times mentioned in the pleadings herein have been copartners, doing business under the firm name *371 and style of Delafield, McGovern & Company,” as alleged in the complaint and the answer; that “all and singular the allegations contained in paragraphs II and III of the plaintiff’s complaint are and each of them is untrue”; “that all and singular the allegations contained in paragraphs IV, V, VI, VII, VTII, and IX of the defendants’ supplemental and amended answer are and each of them is true.” As conclusions of law the court found that defendants were entitled to judgment for the sum of $2,160.40 and costs and that judgment be entered accordingly.

1. It is claimed that the demurrer should have been sustained because the answer was ambiguous and uncertain, as it did not deny all of the specific averments of the verified complaint, but was only a denial of their literal truth. In some particulars this is true, but in others the denials were sufficiently specific. It was permissible to deny the making of the contract as alleged and in the separate defenses admit its execution, for inconsistent defenses may be made even where the pleadings are verified. (Banta v. Siller, 121 Cal. 414, [53 Pac. 935].) There is nó ambiguity in respect of the parties defendant. The complaint, in its caption, designates them by their individual names, describing them also as co-partners under the firm name given, and the complaint contains an allegation that these individuals were copartners, but thereafter refers to them as defendants. The answer pursues the same course. The word “defendants” must be understood to refer to their alleged relation to each other. Hawley Bros. Hardware Co. v. Brownstone, 123 Cal. 643, [56 Pac. 468], cited by appellant, does not sustain their contention. In that case it was held that where several defendants are sued by their individual names, and described as partners, they may be referred to as defendants. But the court held that in such ease an. allegation that “the defendant” had not paid certain notes sued on, was an insufficient allegation of non-payment as to all the defendants. Demurrers for uncertainty and ambiguity, when improperly overruled, do not always work a reversal of the judgment, and will not do so when it appears that the matters complained of by demurrer have not affected any substantial right of the demurrant. (Gassen v. Bower, 72 Cal. 555, [14 Pac. 206]; Alexander v. Central L. and M. Co., 104 Cal. 532, *372 [38 Pac. 410]; Hawley Bros. Hardware Co. v. Brownstone, 123 Cal. 643, [56 Pac. 468]; Stephenson v. Deuel, 125 Cal. 656, [58 Pac. 258]; Williams v. Casebeer, 126 Cal. 77, [58 Pac. 380].) In Stephenson v. Deuel the court said: “The ruling upon demurrer to defendant’s amended answer on the ground of uncertainty and ambiguity cannot now avail plaintiff. The pleadings are verified and defendant’s answer is deemed controverted.

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Bluebook (online)
82 P. 260, 1 Cal. App. 367, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-delafield-calctapp-1905.