Flickinger v. Wrenn Investment Co.

155 P. 627, 172 Cal. 132, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 505
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1916
DocketL. A. No. 3616. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 155 P. 627 (Flickinger v. Wrenn Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flickinger v. Wrenn Investment Co., 155 P. 627, 172 Cal. 132, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 505 (Cal. 1916).

Opinions

The defendants, Wrenn Investment Company, a corporation, and O.C. Heck, were interested as stockholders in the Owners Garage and Supply Company. To increase the working capital of this company and to secure the services of plaintiff, they induced him to purchase twenty-five shares of the stock of the Owners Garage and Supply Company at par and to take employment in that company as manager for the period of one year, agreeing in writing that they (the defendants) would "at the option of the party of the second part (plaintiff), at the expiration of one year from the date hereof purchase from the said second party the said twenty-five shares of the capital stock of the said corporation for said sum of $2500 . . . provided that said second party may give ten days notice before the expiration of said year of his intention to exercise said option."

In his complaint plaintiff set up these facts and pleaded further that "at the expiration of one year from the date of the said contract the said plaintiff exercised his option to sell and deliver the said 25 shares of the capital stock of the said Garage Supply Company to the defendants for the sum of $2500 and in accordance therewith gave to the defendants and to each of them ten days' notice before the expiration of the said year of the intention of the plaintiff to exercise said option and thereupon tendered to the said defendants the said shares of stock and the said certificate No. 54."

The defendants met this complaint with certain admissions and denials, the essential admissions going to the execution of the contract and their failure to purchase the stock from plaintiff, their denials joining issue upon the allegations of the exercise of his option by plaintiff.

Upon the trial there was introduced in evidence plaintiff's written notification delivered to the defendants ten days or *Page 134 more before the expiration of the year. The writing was a notification by plaintiff "that I intend to exercise the option given to me under agreement dated the first day of March, 1910, for the sale by me to you of twenty-five shares of the capital stock of the Owners Garage Supply Company for the sum of $2500. Upon payment of the said sum to me on the 1st day of March, 1911, the said stock will be delivered to you." It further appeared that plaintiff did nothing more in the matter until he brought his action months afterward. Only upon the trial did he tender to defendants the certificate of stock. In this condition of the evidence defendants moved for a nonsuit upon the unassailable ground that plaintiff had not shown an exercise of his option so as to put defendants in default, but had shown merely a service upon defendants of the preliminary ten days' notice, without which he could not at the expiration of the year take the second necessary step of tender and demand; that this tender and demand he had never made, and the evidence showed that he had never made it.

The trial court, expressing its conviction that the motion for a nonsuit must be granted, permitted plaintiff to reopen his case and introduce evidence to excuse him for this failure. After this evidence was introduced the court granted the motion for a nonsuit. The plaintiff then moved for a new trial, which the court granted. It is from this last order that this appeal is taken.

By respondent a preliminary objection to the hearing of this appeal is made upon the ground that the appellants have prepared no bill of exceptions to support their contentions upon which alone they may be considered. The contention is groundless. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 952, 661, 662;Loucks v. Edmondson, 18 Cal. 203; Quivey v. Gambert, 32 Cal. 304; Leonard v. Shaw, 114 Cal. 69, [45 P. 1012];Sprigg v. Barber, 122 Cal. 573, [55 P. 419]; Byxbee v. Dewey,128 Cal. 322, [60 P. 847]; Frost v. Los Angeles Ry. Co.,165 Cal. 365, [132 P. 442].)

It is apparent that the court's order granting a new trial must have been based upon its conviction that the proffered evidence to receive which the case had been reopened was legally sufficient to show a waiver of the necessity of performance on the part of plaintiff because of the repudiation of their contract by defendants. This, of course, presents an *Page 135 entirely different cause of action from that relied on in the complaint, which squarely rests upon full performance by plaintiff of the term of the contract, including the notice of intent to exercise the option and the exercise of the option itself. Conceivably, however, if the evidence were sufficient to show this waiver, the court in the interest of justice might have permitted an amendment to conform to the proofs, and so have obviated the legal difficulty that a judgment cannot be sustained unless the proof establishes the cause of action alleged in the complaint, even though a different cause of action be fully proven. (Nichols v. Randall, 136 Cal. 426, [69 P. 26]; Rogers v. Kimball, 121 Cal. 247, [53 P. 648];Schirmer v. Drexler, 134 Cal. 134, [66 P. 180]; Kredo v.Phelps, 145 Cal. 526, [78 P. 1044].) We pass on, therefore, to a consideration of the evidence introduced.

The Wrenn Investment Company was a corporation. W.W. Kaye, one of the attorneys for plaintiff, was permitted to testify that he went to see defendant Wrenn, who, he understood, was carrying on negotiations looking to the sale of the Owners Garage and Supply Company, and told him that Flickinger would not consent to a sale "unless something was done on the part of himself or the Wrenn Investment Company and Mr. Heck in regard to taking up this contract which is the subject of action." Mr. Wrenn replied "that he or they would not entertain any proposition at all in regard to carrying out that contract. He said that before he would pay one cent or offer one cent to Mr. Flickinger on that stock he would take the whole concern out in the street and burn it." Mr. Kaye did not know what, if any, position Mr. Wrenn occupied in the Wrenn Investment Company; did not know whether or not he had any authority to represent the company or to represent the defendant Heck. All that he knew was that he purported to speak for the Wrenn Investment Company, but he knew nothing about his authorization or lack of authorization so to do. Another witness, E.P. Hoisington, in the employ of the defendants Wrenn and Heck, testified that he overheard Mr. Wrenn and Mr. Heck in conversation state that "they did not intend to pay Mr. Flickinger the amount that became due on this contract." Both of these conversations took place in the summer of 1910, and according to the testimony of plaintiff he was informed of them in July, 1910. Hoisington was *Page 136 not, nor is it contended that he was, authorized to receive any communication on behalf of plaintiff nor authorized by the defendants to represent them or to communicate to anybody anything which he had overheard. All of this was some nine or ten months before the arrival of the time for the exercise of the option. Flickinger was at the time a director of the Wrenn Investment Company.

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Related

Veterans' Welfare Board v. Burt
41 P.2d 587 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)
Flickinger v. Heck
200 P. 1045 (California Supreme Court, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
155 P. 627, 172 Cal. 132, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flickinger-v-wrenn-investment-co-cal-1916.