Charleville v. Metropolitan Trust Co. of California

29 P.2d 241, 136 Cal. App. 349, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1031
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 23, 1934
DocketDocket No. 1414.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 241 (Charleville v. Metropolitan Trust Co. of California) 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
Charleville v. Metropolitan Trust Co. of California, 29 P.2d 241, 136 Cal. App. 349, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1031 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

Appellant was very seriously injured when a wall bed in which he was sleeping collapsed. He brought his action to recover damages and has appealed from a judgment entered for respondents following the granting of their motions for nonsuit. He does not question the correctness of this judgment in favor of certain defendants who are not named as respondents here.

Earle C. Dingwell was the owner of a number of apartment houses in Los Angeles and San Bernardino Counties, among them the Norman Manor Apartments in the city of San Bernardino. He was in financial difficulties in the summer of 1930 and entered into an agreement with many of his creditors whereby he sought to secure their claims and provide for payment. He transferred the properties to the Metropolitan Trust Company of California in trust under the terms of a duly executed declaration of trust wherein he was designated as trustor and the Metropolitan Trust Company of California, the trustee. Herbert M. Goddard and Louis Pokress, who had advanced $104,295.36 to be used in paying taxes and assessments and placing in good standing certain trust deeds upon the properties and to be applied on the claims of laborers and materialmen, were designated class A beneficiaries. The large list of unsecured creditors, including all of the respondents not named in this paragraph, were designated class B beneficiaries, and Janet W. Goddard and Sophia Dingwell, residuary beneficiaries. In the declaration of trust the trustor, class A, class B, and the residuary beneficiaries appointed E'arle C. Dingwell and Thomas Waddell “a committee to operate, manage and conduct the Trust Estate as and for apartment house uses and purposes, which committee shall manage and have complete charge of said Trust property, and each and every part thereof, employing such house managers, janitors, and other *353 help as shall, in the opinion of the committee, be needed for the proper maintenance and operation of the Trust property ; and the power of the Trustee to operate, manage, and conduct said Trust Estate as and for apartment house uses and purposes shall be abridged and suspended until and unless class B beneficiaries, representing at least thirty-three and one-third per cent (33%%) of the then unpaid balances of the Trustee’s Certificates then outstanding, shall terminate the rights, powers, duties and employment hereunder of Earl— C. Dingwell and said Thomas Waddell for good and sufficient cause”. During the times material to this action Margaret Wilkinson was manager of the Norman Manor Apartments.

On October 13, 1930, appellant rented a furnished apartment, number 114, in the Norman Manor Apartments for occupancy by himself and wife. The apartment was equipped with a Holmes wall bed, manufactured by the Holmes Bed Manufacturing Company, and sold and installed by Barker Brothers, Incorporated. Appellant and his wife occupied the apartment until January 28, 1931. The rents for the months of November and December, 1930, and January, 1931, were paid to the trust and became a part of its assets.

The wall bed fitted into a recess about eighteen inches deep when not in use and was lowered into the room when it was to be occupied. It had three powerful coil springs on each side to hold it in position and to assist in raising it. Its head was fastened to the floor by eight one and one-quarter-inch screws which passed through holes in angle irons which were part of the bed, through the carpet and filler under it and into the floor boards.

On the night of January 28, 1931, after appellant and his wife had retired, the screws holding the bed to the floor gave way. The springs pulled the head of the bed onto appellant, doubling his head onto his body, fracturing his sixth and seventh cervical vertebrae and injuring his spinal cord in the neighborhood of his sixth, seventh and eighth cervical segments. The amount of appellant’s damage is not now in issue so it is not necessary to further describe his injuries.

*354 There were a number of other similar wall beds in the Norman Manor Apartments. While the bed in apartment number 114 had not given trouble before January 28, 1931, a number of the other wall beds had loosened the screws with which they were held to the floor. A repairman employed by Dingwell to refasten the loosened beds told him and Margaret Wilkinson several times before the accident here in question that the Holmes wall beds were not properly installed and that unless they were more securely fastened to the floor someone would be injured or killed.

The general question of the liability of the class A, class B, and residuary beneficiaries under the terms of the trust is not argued in any of the briefs filed in their behalf. Nolis the question of the liability under the trust of the Metropolitan Trust Company of California in its individual, as distinguished from its trust capacity, considered in its brief. We have not considered these questions and nothing said here should be construed as bearing upon them.

Appellant urges the following grounds for a reversal of the judgment:

“An affirmative defense must be pleaded and proven and defendants who have failed to plead such affirmative defense cannot rely on the same.
“Defendants cannot develop an affirmative defense by improper cross-examination and then predicate a judgment of nonsuit on such improperly admitted testimony.
“The question of whether sums of money received by plaintiffs from former defendants were received by plaintiff as compensation for his injuries or as consideration for certain covenants not to sue presented a question of fact to be determined by the jury, and it was not proper for the Court to determine this issue on a motion for nonsuit.
“The execution of a covenant not to sue one joint tortfeasor is not a bar to a further prosecution of this action.”

The first and second of these contentions will be considered together.

Appellant filed a complaint, a first amended complaint, and a second amended complaint. Several defendants named in the first two pleadings were not named in the third. While he was on the witness-stand it was developed on cross-examination, over the strenuous objection of his counsel, that he had received approximately $6,700 from *355 certain defendants. Some of the defendants alleged that appellant had been paid money in settlement of his claim for damages by other defendants. Other defendants did not plead this defense.

For the purpose of this opinion we may assume that the trial court erred in overruling the objection to the questions eliciting information concerning these payments, and that retraxit is an affirmative defense which must be plead and proved by a defendant before he can avail himself of it. These errors do not require a reversal of the judgment. If we should reverse the judgment solely because of them the case would return to the court below for a new trial. A request to amend the answers to plead the payments, if made in proper time, would have to be granted. The fact of the payments could then be proved by the defendants as part of their cases.

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Bluebook (online)
29 P.2d 241, 136 Cal. App. 349, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charleville-v-metropolitan-trust-co-of-california-calctapp-1934.