Federoff v. Birks Bros.

242 P. 881, 75 Cal. App. 189, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 104
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 13, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2837.
StatusPublished

This text of 242 P. 881 (Federoff v. Birks Bros.) 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
Federoff v. Birks Bros., 242 P. 881, 75 Cal. App. 189, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 104 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

Action to recover balance of $950 alleged to be due upon a promissory note executed and delivered for the sum of $1,620, by the Birks Bros., to the defendant H. B. Whitten, and assigned by him to the plaintiff W. R. Federoff. The note was given on account of the purchase price of a 2%-ton U. S. truck sold upon contract. The defendants interpose the defense of fraud and misrepresentation. The action was tried before a jury, and at the conclusion of the defendants’ testimony upon the defense of fraud and misrepresentation, the court directed the jury to bring in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and cross-defendant and against the appellant in the sum of $950, and also directed the jury to fix the amount of the attorneys’ fees. The jury brought in a verdict as directed and fixed the attorneys’ fees at the sum of $50. - From this judgment the defendants Birks have appealed. The appellants in their answer set up a number of specifications of fraud and misrepresentation, but at the trial attempted only to prove two of the items thereof, to wit: That the plaintiff’s assignor represented the truck to be in good running condition, and, also, that the truck would carry a tractor weighing about 7,500 pounds. The truck involved in this transaction was a second-hand machine and had been used about six weeks. The evidence shows that, in response to an advertisement inserted in a Sacramento paper by the respondent Whitten that he had a *191 second-hand truck for sale, the appellants called upon said Whitten at his office in the city of Sacramento, examined the truck and entered into negotiations with him culminating in the purchase thereof. During the course of the conversation leading up to the purchase, it is claimed by the appellants that the respondent Whitten made certain false and fraudulent representations both as to the capacity of the 2%-ton truck to carry a tractor weighing 7,500 pounds and also as to the condition of the truck. The testimony of John T. Birks, who appears to have conducted the negotiations on the part of the appellants,- on direct examination, concerning the carrying capacity of the truck, is set out in the transcript as follows: “A. I told him what make of a tractor it was and told him just what it weighed. Q. What was it? A. It weighed on the road 7,600 pounds with a load. Q. And did you tell him with a load ? A. It was about 7,500 with a load. Q. What was said about the road between your place and Santa Rosa? A. I told him the kind of a road we had to travel over and he was acquainted with it and he said he would guarantee to haul that tractor over that road.” The same witness, upon direct examination as to the condition of the truck, testified as follows: “A. He said it was in good condition and guaranteed it to be in good condition and would do that work for which we wanted it.” Upon cross-examination this witness testified as follows: “A. He guaranteed it to haul that tractor and told me—I told him what it weighed and he guaranteed it to haul that tractor and I told him of the other work we wanted to do with it and he said it would do that work.” It further appears from the testimony that one of the purposes for which the appellants wanted the truck was to haul the tractor over the road mentioned between two farms. As to the condition of the truck, the witness testified as follows: “Q. Now in what particulars was the truck not in good running condition when you took it across the bridge into Yolo County? A. You say why wasn’t it in good running order? Q. Why wasn’t it in good condition, in what way? A. I couldn’t say there was anything the matter with it when we got across there. Q. In what particulars was it not in good running condition when you took it across the bridge? A. I supposed it was in good' running condition. Q. Well was it? A. It seemed to be when we took it across. Q. You think it was? A. It seemed to be. Q. You testify now, *192 or your testimony now is that it was in good running order when you took it across that bridge? A. Well as far as I could see it, at that time. Q. I am asking you at that time in your opinion was it in good running condition ? A. It seemed to be as far as I could tell. Q. And you believed it was? A. It seemed to be. Q. Then you think at the time you first took it into your possession that the truck was in good running order? A. Well it seemed to be. Of course it gave me trouble on the way home. Q. But you think when it was delivered to you it was in good running condition ? A.- It seemed to be. ■ Q. And you believed it was? A. Well I believed it was. It seemed to me that way.” The witness further testified that he had difficulty with the truck on the way home and that it stopped on him several times and that once when it stopped he had the" assistance of someone to remedy the defect and then he proceeded on with the truck. The testimony simply shows that the driver of the truck had some trouble with it in reaching home, but the testimony does not disclose what the defects, if any there were, in the machinery of the truck, or what, if any, there was of poor condition in the truck that caused the driver thereof to have the difficulty mentioned.

The truck was purchased some time during the month of November, 1921. The attempt to haul the tractor with the truck was not made until some time late in the spring of 1922. The testimony in this particular is as follows: “A. Well, we loaded the tractor on and tried to haul it. Q, And where did you load the tractor on? A. At the home ranch near Meridian. Q. And how long was that after you purchased the truck? A. Well, I don’t remember just how long it was. It was some time that spring after we purchased the truck. Q. And what experience did you have in that connection ? A. We loaded it on and spent nearly an entire day trying to make it pull and get it out of the corral. Q. That was at your river ranch in this county? A. Yes, sir. Q. On level ground? A. Yes, sir. Q. Tell us what you did? A. We loaded the tractor on it one day and we were going to take it out there the next day and we tried to drive it and it would go a short distance and stop. Q. By stopping you mean the engine would stop? A. Yes, sir, the engine would stop. Q. And how far did you get in your effort to haul the tractor to *193 the work? A. I never got it out of the corral or barnyard. Q. Who was there with you? A. Myself and brother. Q. How long did you work with the truck to take it out? A. All day. Q. Did you succeed in hauling this tractor at all? A. No.”

The action in this case was not begun until some two years after the transaction mentioned and during that period of time the testimony shows that the appellants spent something like $300 in having repairs made upon the truck. It further appears that the appellant John R. Birks had a conversation with Whitten about the truck some months after its purchase, in which conversation the respondent Whitten advised the appellants to take the truck to some good mechanic and have him go over the same. The record shows no testimony of any mechanicians. It also appears that some conversation was had between one of the appellants and the respondent Whitten after the institution of this action in which the appellant stated that the truck was “no good” and Whitten replied, “that a fellow would naturally say that because he was suing him for the pay of the truck. ’ ’

The testimony fails to show the condition of the ground in the corral where the appellants attempted to haul the 7,500-pound tractor upon the 2%-ton truck.

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Bluebook (online)
242 P. 881, 75 Cal. App. 189, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federoff-v-birks-bros-calctapp-1925.