Grant v. United States Electronics Corp.

270 P.2d 64, 125 Cal. App. 2d 193, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1864
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 1954
DocketCiv. 19973
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 270 P.2d 64 (Grant v. United States Electronics Corp.) 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
Grant v. United States Electronics Corp., 270 P.2d 64, 125 Cal. App. 2d 193, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1864 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

VALLÉE, J.

Appeal by defendant Marquis from an adverse judgment in an action for damages for fraud. Defendant United States Electronics Corporation defaulted. It will be referred to as “the corporation.” Marquis will be referred to as “defendant.”

In 1950 the corporation was engaged in the promotion and sale of a playback electronic audible advertising machine, which during its operation reproduced a broadcast of advertising matter. The machines were sold by a franchise method as to area under written contracts. Contracts were made with various distributors, one of whom was located in San Francisco. On and prior to September 8, 1950, defendant Marquis was president of the corporation. He was dissatisfied with the San Francisco distributor and he was in *195 terested in obtaining a new one. Plaintiff was a Chrysler dealer in Hollister.

The complaint alleged that for the purpose of inducing plaintiff to become the San Francisco distributor and to enter into a contract with the corporation, defendants represented to and promised plaintiff: “ (a) That the corporate defendant was financially and otherwise capable of carrying out and fulfilling, and would carry out and fulfill, any agreement it made with the plaintiff or with any other person, (b) That the corporate defendant was solvent and was able to pay upon demand each and all of its obligations without discount, (c) That whatever, if any, consideration in money or otherwise plaintiff should pay or give under any agreement made between plaintiff and the corporate defendant would be used for the benefit of the defendant, United States Electronics Corporation.” The complaint also alleged that the representations were false, the promise made without any intention of performing it, and all other facts necessary to state a cause of action for fraud.

The court found that the allegations of the complaint were true and that plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $4,800. Judgment was entered accordingly, from which Marquis appeals.

Defendant’s specifications of error are: 1. Plaintiff did not prove the alleged acts of fraud by competent admissible evidence. 2. The findings are not supported by competent evidence. 3. The acts alleged and found do not constitute actionable fraud.

The first and second specifications of error are based on the claim that the first two representations alleged and found constitute representations as to the credit of the corporate defendant; and since they were not in writing, they are not actionable under section 1974 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

Testifying about the corporation, defendant Marquis said: “It was a corporation which I had put in all the money, and nobody else put in any money, and I controlled that corporation.”

Sometime prior to September 1950, the corporation offered a Mr. Oldham a fee of $200 if he could secure someone to take over the San Francisco area distributorship. Oldham talked to Richard Mealey about it. Mealey talked to plaintiff, his friend. Plaintiff sent Mealey to Los Angeles to talk to defendant. Mealey met defendant and told him plaintiff was his principal, that plaintiff had sent him to obtain what *196 information he conld so plaintiff could evaluate his findings. Defendant told Healey they had a practice all across the United States that distributors would have to place a deposit of $10 a machine as a goodwill or performance piece to be sure the machines were shipped according to invoice; they would be required to take 600 machines a month. Healey asked defendant “if that wasn’t a pretty heavy dose of equipment to take away, and he said no, we probably would be asking for many more machines than that, and they could make them if necessary, but he wanted a minimum of $6,000 deposit.” Defendant said “they didn’t need our money; it was just a deposit and there was nothing wrong with that; that they were well financed and a well-established company, and all they wanted was that money to be placed in a deposit so they could give it back to us each time we were invoiced machines.” Defendant said the factory was in production, but as it was Labor Day it would be useless to go through the plant. Healey asked defendant: “As a war baby what happens to this if we go ahead and Hr. Grant deposits $6,000 with you and you can’t make the machines? And he said, ‘Oh, don’t worry about that. We have sub-assemblies that can make thousands of these machines. As a matter of fact, my associate, Hr. Wolvin, is now traveling throughout the United States and working with our distributors and we are shipping machines day after day, and we will have good production to meet the terms of this contract. ’ ” Defendant said they had 1,000 machines in the factory ready for shipment. Defendant gave Healey copies of a contract which he stated was used by the corporation, and said $1,000 should be sent to him with the contract and that he (defendant) would go to Hollister or San Francisco to terminate the contract with the San Francisco distributor and negotiate the new contract. Healey then returned to Hollister, reported his conversation with defendant to plaintiff, and delivered the copies of the contract to him. On September 8, 1950, plaintiff signed the contract and mailed it with a certified check for $1,000 to defendant.

Defendant went to Hollister and on September 14, 1950, met plaintiff and Healey. Plaintiff asked defendant why it was necessary to give him an additional $5,000 as deposit money since he had already sent him $1,000 “to bind the original phase of the contract.” Defendant said that was their way of doing business; he had set up a quota of 600 machines for plaintiff; on every machine plaintiff bought *197 he would get on the invoice a $10 credit until the $6,000 was used up, and that “this money would be held in deposit in their company.” Plaintiff asked defendant if with the $1,000 he had already sent him he would give him an additional $1,000, would he accept two promissory notes, “one in thirty days and one in sixty days.” Defendant agreed. Plaintiff asked defendant if he could be sure when his $6,000 was on deposit that the corporation could furnish that many machines. Defendant replied that the corporation had 1,000 machines on hand; their factory was building machines all the time; they had distributors in New York, St. Louis, Philadelphia, and all over the United States; he could fulfill every term that was in the contract. Plaintiff asked him what happened in the event he did not get the machines. Defendant replied, “My company is solvent and you will get your money back.” Various changes were then made in the contract and it was executed. Plaintiff paid defendant the additional $1,000 and executed the two notes.

The corporation did not at any time own a factory. It purchased machines from another company. It never had 1,000 machines on hand. The corporation was insolvent. As of August 30, 1950, 14 days before plaintiff closed the deal, it had a net operating loss of $56,147.69 with assets of $29,-113.58 and liabilities of $78,011.27. In September 1950, it owed the company which had sold it machines between $20,000 and $21,000. On September 26, 1950, defendant sold out to one Valíanos. Defendant took plaintiff’s notes totaling $4,000 and the cash on hand, which were all of the assets of the corporation. Plaintiff paid the notes when due. Defendant received and retained the money.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P.2d 64, 125 Cal. App. 2d 193, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-united-states-electronics-corp-calctapp-1954.