Davidson Investment Co. v. Dabney

284 P. 673, 103 Cal. App. 392, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 841
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 1930
DocketDocket No. 6269.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 284 P. 673 (Davidson Investment Co. v. Dabney) 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
Davidson Investment Co. v. Dabney, 284 P. 673, 103 Cal. App. 392, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 841 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

*394 BURNELL, J., pro tem.

The defendant, appealing from a judgment on the pleadings, seeks a reversal thereof upon three grounds: First, that material issues were raised by his answer; second, that the pleading of affirmative matter as a defense barred the plaintiff from taking such judgment, and third, that the refusal of the court to allow him to amend his answer was reversible error.

The complaint is in the form common to actions in claim and delivery. It alleges the ownership and right of possession in the plaintiff of a certain automobile, that the value thereof is $1500, that the same is in the possession of and wrongfully detained by the defendant, a demand by the plaintiff for possession and refusal of delivery by the defendant and $1500 damages. The allegation as to plaintiff’s ownership and right of possession is traversed by a denial in the following form: “The defendant has no knowledge'or information sufficient to form a belief as to those allegations contained in paragraph two of the complaint, and basing his denial thereon denies each and every allegation in said paragraph contained.” It is too well established in California to be controverted that a denial on lack of knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief is not a denial and is so fatally defective as to require it to be construed as an admission of the allegations attempted to be denied. In the case of Aronson & Co. v. Pearson, 199 Cal. 295 [249 Pac. 191, 193], the defendant attempted to make a denial in the following words: “Defendant alleges she has not sufficient knowledge, or information upon which to base a belief, and placing her denial upon that ground denies,” etc. The court said regarding this sort of an attempted denial:

“For sixty-eight years the form of denial adopted by the defendant has been held insufficient. Relative to the denial of the allegations of a verified complaint, section 437 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: ‘If the defendant has no information or belief upon the subject sufficient to enable him to answer an allegation of the complaint, he may so state in his answer, and place his denial on that ground.’ Section 46 of the Practice Act, as amended in 1854, permitted a defendant to deny an allegation of a verified complaint ‘according to his information and belief.’ In Curtis v. Richards & Vantine, 9 Cal. 34, 38, the defendants based *395 their denial upon the averment that ‘they have not sufficient knowledge or information to form a belief. ’ The court said, ‘By the forty-sixth section of the Practice Act, as originally passed in 1851, it was provided that an allegation of the complaint might be controverted by a denial ‘of any knowledge thereof sufficient to form a belief. ’ In practice, this mode of denial was found to furnish a convenient pretext for evading the statute. In some instances defendants became critical in their judgments, as to the extent and knowledge sufficient to form a belief, and would, without hesitation, deny, in that form, facts upon the existence of which they did not hesitate to act in other matters. In 1854 the forty-sixth section was amended to the present language, and the wisdom of the amendment is well illustrated by the present case.’ The same construction has been placed upon the foregoing provision of section 437 of the Code of Civil Procedure. (Naftzger v. Gregg, 99 Cal. 83, 87 [37 Am. St. Rep. 23, 33 Pac. 757]; Turner v. Watkins, 36 Cal. App. 503, 504 [172 Pac. 620]; Nave v. Graham, 37 Cal. App. 332, 334 [174 Pac. 76].) Such a denial will not be held fatally defective upon appeal if it was treated by the parties at the trial as creating an issue, but since in this case neither party offered any evidence bearing upon the question, there is no ground for holding that it was so treated.”

Such an attempted denial is evasive and raises no issue. It may therefore be entirely disregarded (Le Breton v. Stanley Contracting Co., 15 Cal. App. 429 [114 Pac. 1028]; Bartlett Estate Co. v. Fraser, 11 Cal. App. 373 [105 Pac. 130] ; Mullally v. Townsend, 119 Cal. 47 [50 Pac. 1066]).

Defendant thus answers the allegation of the complaint as to value: “Denies that the personal property described in the complaint is of the value of fifteen hundred dollars ($1500.00) and in that behalf alleges that said property is worth far in excess of the sum of fifteen hundred ($1500.00) dollars.” This is a splendid example of a negative pregnant which can give birth to no issue.

The allegation as to defendant’s possession is met by a denial that the property “is unlawfully detained by” the defendant, but the fact of defendant’s possession and detention thereof is not denied at all. This manner of pleading is an attempt to deny a legal conclusion and raises no issue as to the facts, as has many times been held in this *396 state (Prichard v. Kimball, 190 Cal. 763 [214 Pac. 863] ; Richardson v. Smith, 29 Cal. 529; Lay v. Neville, 25 Cal. 545; Busenius v. Coffee, 14 Cal. 91). It amounts to an admission of possession as alleged in the complaint (Richardson v. Smith, supra).

The attempted denial of the allegation as to damages is open to the same criticism as that just discussed, and the remaining allegations of the complaint are not denied at all.

It is evident from the foregoing review of the defendant’s answer that it raises no issue as to any of the facts alleged in the complaint and that appellant’s first point is without merit.

As to the claim that the second defense sets up affirmative matter and thus bars plaintiff from the right to ask and receive a judgment on the pleadings, we are constrained to hold that it fails to allege facts which would constitute a defense to the case made by the facts as plead in the complaint and, as we have held, admitted by the failure of the defendant to deny them. The defense attempted to be set up is as follows: That the defendant on December 1, 1925, purchased the automobile which is the subject of the action from the plaintiff under an agreement whereby defendant was to pay $2,500 therefor, of which sum $250 was to be and was paid at the time the agreement was made, the balance to be paid in monthly installments of $250 each. A further consideration for the purchase was the settlement of a lawsuit in which one Ring was defendant and the agreement of the plaintiff herein to dismiss that action and to return to Ring a note and a mortgage given by him “to secure the payment thereof upon the chattels mentioned” in the complaint. It is alleged that the plaintiff. failed to return the note and mortgage and to dismiss the action and that the note is in the sum of $2,000, “which sum this defendant promised and agreed with said Ring that he would pay.” This purported defense sets up, at most, an executory agreement of sale.

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Bluebook (online)
284 P. 673, 103 Cal. App. 392, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-investment-co-v-dabney-calctapp-1930.