Dick v. Woolson

235 P.2d 119, 106 Cal. App. 2d 415, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1762
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 1951
DocketCiv. 18191
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 235 P.2d 119 (Dick v. Woolson) 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
Dick v. Woolson, 235 P.2d 119, 106 Cal. App. 2d 415, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1762 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

SHINN, P. J.

J.From a money judgment for plaintiff rendered after trial to the court, defendants Builders Supply Corporation and Corporation Management, Inc., appeal. The judgment was for the balance due on a contract for sale of a business by plaintiff to defendant Woolson. The corporate defendants are successive assignees of Woolson of the sales contract and plaintiff sues as third party beneficiary of the assignments by which the corporations assumed Woolson’s obligation.

The business transactions to be reviewed were involved, and the evidence wandered far from the issues to be tried. The principal facts are that plaintiff Dick and defendant Woolson entered into an agreement whereby, for a consideration of $25,000, Dick sold to Woolson a going business, The Home Improvement Company. The payment terms were $5,000 on the signing of the agreement, an additional $5,000 within 90 days, and the remaining $15,000 in equal monthly installments of $1,000 or more beginning September 1, 1947. Woolson agreed to form a corporation which would give a note to Dick for the balance due on the contract and would be jointly liable with Woolson on the contract. On May 31, 1947, Woolson assigned the sales contract to defendant Corporation Management, Inc., which assumed all the liabilities and obligations under the contract. On June 4, 1947, Corporation Management assigned the sales contract to defendant Builders Supply Corporation, which assumed the contractual liabilities and obligations. (The corporate defendants will be referred to as Management and Builders.) Both corporations were formed just prior to taking the assignments *418 and after the two assignments Builders’ major asset was the Home Improvement Company and Management’s major asset was the common stock of Builders. At this point in the transaction, if the sales contract was still operative and there had been no rescission of the assignment contracts, plaintiff was a creditor under the contract with Woolson, was creditor-beneficiary under a contract between Woolson and Management, and a creditor-beneficiary under the contract between Management and Builders. In August, 1947, plaintiff received from Builders the second $5,000 payment together with a promissory note for $15,297.22, the balance due on the contract, plus interest from May 1st. As provided in the contract, Builders made additional payments on September 1 and October 1, 1947. These payments were made even though the note was not due until November, 1948. Plaintiff received no other payments and brought this action against Woolson and Builders on March 18,1948, claiming the accrued payments due under the contract plus interest. On November 23, 1948, the complaint was amended to include Management as a defendant and to add a cause of action on the note against Builders, and further to change the amount claimed to the full contract price which was by that time past due.

Judgment was granted against all three defendants for the balance due plus interest at 5 per cent and defendants’ motion for a new trial was denied. Defendant Woolson did not appear at the trial and is not here appealing. Defendant Builders no longer owns the assets forming the subject matter of the sales contract, having reassigned them to Management in December, 1947. Builders was shown to be insolvent.

Defendants’ contentions on appeal are: (1) Builders’ note given to plaintiff discharged its liability under the sales contract; (2) Builders can be sued on the note only after maturity and as this action was brought before maturity it should be dismissed; (3) even if the note did mot discharge the sales contract, Management rescinded its assignment from Woolson and plaintiff cannot sue as beneficiary of a nonexistent contract; (4) Management was induced to accept the assignment by Woolson’s fraud. These contentions will be considered in order.

In order for the note to operate as payment of the sales contract it was necessary to show that it was so accepted by plaintiff. There was no evidence that plaintiff so treated the note. This conclusion is fortified by the terms of the sales contract under which the note was to be given as *419 “collateral to and coincident with liability on the contract.” The further fact that Builders proceeded to make payments under the contract even after the note was given is inconsistent with the contention that the note discharged the sales contract. The sales contract was outstanding and if Builders had not rescinded the assignment to it before plaintiff accepted the benefit of the assignment, Builders was clearly liable to plaintiff on a creditor-beneficiary theory.

The judgment against Builders was, as appellants state, “based exclusively upon its assumption on June 4, 1947, of the obligations of the contract dated May 1, 1947.” If, therefore, liability under the contract was established, it is immaterial whether the action on the note was premature.

As regards Management, the contention is that the note discharged its liability on its acceptance of the assignment. The contract provided that a corporation was to be formed, that it would issue a note to plaintiff for the balance due, and that the “note [would] be collateral to and coincident with the obligations of [Woolson].” Management’s argument is that the sales contract clearly shows the only obligation of the corporation would be on the note since it would be “collateral” to Woolson’s obligation on the sales contract. This might have been true had there been no independent assumption by the corporation of the contract obligations. The basis of the action against Management is that it assumed Woolson’s obligation and is thus liable to plaintiff, the creditor-beneficiary of the assumption contract. As indicated above, Woolson was not discharged on the contract by plaintiff’s acceptance of the note; neither was his assignee of the contract discharged.

The principal question on the appeal is that raised by contentions three and four—as to the nature of the liability to a third party beneficiary. A person not a party to a contract may still sue for its enforcement where it is made expressly for his benefit and has not been rescinded. (Civ. Code, § 1559.) Where the obligations of a contract are assumed, the creditor under the original contract may sue the assuming party on the theory that he is an express beneficiary of the assumption contract. The creditor may join both the assuming party and the original debtor. (Anderson v. Calaveras Cent. Min. Corp., 13 Cal.App.2d 338, 343-344 [57 P.2d 560].) However, until the creditor-beneficiary has accepted the benefit or has detrimentally acted in reliance thereon, the assuming party may rescind. *420 But as long as the assuming promisor continues to retain the consideration from the original promisee, the contract for the benefit of the third party cannot be rescinded or revoked. (Pitzer v. Wedel, 73 Cal.App.2d 86 [165 P.2d 971]; Pearsall v. Townsend,, 7 Cal.App.2d 162 [45 P.2d 824].)

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Bluebook (online)
235 P.2d 119, 106 Cal. App. 2d 415, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dick-v-woolson-calctapp-1951.