Chadbourne v. White

198 P. 836, 52 Cal. App. 336, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 264
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2266.
StatusPublished

This text of 198 P. 836 (Chadbourne v. White) 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
Chadbourne v. White, 198 P. 836, 52 Cal. App. 336, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 264 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HART, J.

This action is by the plaintiffs as copartners against the defendant upon a promissory note for the sum of $1,000, dated April 3, 1914, and due and payable on September’ 1, 1914. The complaint is in the usual form of such an action. In due time the defendant filed an answer, admitting the execution of the note by him and that it was given as in part payment of a certain tractor, but defending himself against the validity of the note on the ground that the tractor failed to measure up to an alleged express warranty made by the seller as to the capacity of ■the machine to perform the work for which it was designed. The answer alleges that, immediately upon discovering that the tractor was not as warranted, the defendant rescinded the contract for its purchase and offered to restore the tractor. to the plaintiffs, at the same time demanding the return to him of the note in suit; that plaintiffs refused, and ever since have refused, to accept the return of said tractor and to deliver to defendant the said note. In the same answer the defendant set up a second defense based upon false and fraudulent representations by the plaintiffs relative to the tractor and its capacity or power for doing the work it was intended for. That cause of action also contained, in the same language as it appeared in the first cause of action, the allegation that, in the month of July, 1914, the defendant first discovered the worthlessness of the tractor and then offered to return the same to plaintiffs and to place the latter in the same position as they were before the defendant entered into the contract for the purchase of the engine, and demanded of plaintiffs the return of the note upon which the complaint declares, and that plaintiffs have at all times since said offer refused to accept the same and to redeliver said note to defendant. The answer prayed for the cancellation of the note and for the sum of $3,000 for loss of *338 crop by reason of the failure of the tractor to perform the work essential to the growing and the harvesting of the crop for the year 1914.

The special defense or the counterclaim was answered by the plaintiffs, and on the day the cause came on for trial (December 4, 1918) the defendant made an application for leave to amend his answer, and the same was allowed. The effect of the said amendment was to exclude from the answer all the allegations as to false and fraudulent representations and consequently to leave in the ease as the sole ground for the rescission of the contract of purchase and thereupon the cancellation of the note in suit the fact, as alleged, that the tractor was not as warranted by the plaintiffs, alleging also that immediately upon discovery of that fact defendant offered to return the tractor, etc.

Upon the issues thus framed, the case was tried and on the sixteenth day of December, 1918, the case was taken under advisement.

On March 11, 1919, no decision then having been arrived at or declared, the defendant moved for leave to file another amended answer and counterclaim so that the same would “conform to the pleadings and the proof taken at the trial.” The amended answer changed the allegation with regard to offering to return the tractor, etc., “immediately upon discovering that said tractor was worthless, ’ ’ by stating in lieu thereof that from the time of the delivery of the tractor to the defendant the same “proved unworkable,” but that defendant believed and had faith that by making proper repairs on the same that said tractor could be put in condition to perform the labor which the plaintiffs and their agent “warranted and represented that it would' perform as aforesaid.” The allegation goes on with the statement that defendant continued to have faith, etc., until the date he rescinded the contract of purchase, that the tractor could be put in workable condition, and that he employed many expert tractor engineers on such faith, at great expense, to work on and operate and repair the machine, to no purpose, however, since the parts of the tractor continued to get out of order or be broken; that thus the defendant tested and experimented with the tractor upon the belief that its defects could be so corrected as to render it capable of performing its work properly until the month of *339 August, 1914, when he discovered that said tractor was inherently defective in its construction and not capable of being repaired so as to make it work as warranted, etc. The relief asked for by this amended answer, in addition to re. scission and cancellation, was for damages, not for the crop, as was the prayer in the original pleading of defendant, but for money alleged to have been expended by defendant in repairing and attempting to operate the tractor.

The plaintiffs moved to strike out the second amended answer and also filed a demurrer thereto, hut the motion was denied and the demurrer overruled. These orders were made on the eighth day of September, 1919. Plaintiff thereupon filed an answer to the answer and counterclaim of defendant. On the fifteenth day of September, 1919, the court filed a written decision against the plaintiffs, and on the twenty-third day of September, 1919, counsel for plaintiffs moved to reopen the cause before judgment. The principal ground upon which said motion was founded and pressed was that the second amended answer, filed, as seen, after the trial of the case—that is, after the proofs had been received and the ease submitted for decision—contained “new and other matter than that contained in the amended answer and cross-complaint upon which said defendant relied when the said cause was tried and heard, and when the said cause was submitted to the above entitled court for decision.” This motion was denied.

Findings were made and judgment rendered and entered, rescinding the contract of sale of the tractor and ordering the note in suit to he delivered to defendant for cancellation. The defendant was not awarded damages.

This appeal is by the plaintiff from the judgment so entered, and is supported by a transcript of the proceedings had at the trial, as prescribed by section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The assignment of error first discussed in the briefs involves the action of the court in allowing the defendant to file the amended answer after trial had been completed and in denying the motion of the plaintiff for a reopening of the case after the filing of said amended pleading, hut we may waive consideration of this point, since we have concluded that the judgment must for other reasons be reversed.

*340 In taking up the merits of the controversy it is deemed the more orderly first to state the facts of the transaction upon which this action is founded. One Joseph Peltier was, in the year 1913, and down to the date of the sale thereof by him, the owner of a ranch not far from Suisun City, in Solano County, consisting principally, if not altogether, of tule lands. Either in the month of November or December, 1913, he purchased at Nos Angeles two Buffalo-Pitts gas "tractors, paying therefor the sum of $1,500 each, the price of said tractors later and at the time of the trial of this action having advanced to the sum of $3,000 each. Before completing the contract for the purchase of said tractors, Peltier had the machines examined by an expert “gas-engine man” employed by him for that purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 P. 836, 52 Cal. App. 336, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadbourne-v-white-calctapp-1921.