Hogan v. Anthony

198 P. 47, 52 Cal. App. 158, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 100
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3106.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 198 P. 47 (Hogan v. Anthony) 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
Hogan v. Anthony, 198 P. 47, 52 Cal. App. 158, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 100 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor in an action brought to recover $500 paid by him to the defendant Anthony on account of the purchase price of an automobile truck. Anthony is the only defendant who appeals. For convenience, we shall treat the case as though appellant were the sole defendant.

On August 12, 1914, defendant agreed to sell and plaintiff agreed to buy the truck for the sum of $1,650. At that time plaintiff paid $500 on account of the purchase price and agreed to pay the balance in eleven monthly installments of $100 each, and one, the last, of $50, all to be evidenced by promissory notes due and payable in accordance with the agreement. On the next day, August 13th, plaintiff and defendant executed an instrument designated “Lease and Conditional Sale of Automobile.” At the same time plaintiff made and executed the promissory notes in accordance with his agreement, made the day before. Thereupon the truck was delivered to plaintiff, who used it in his business until September 18, 1914, when he surrendered possession to defendant. The last-mentioned instrument, that entitled “Lease and Conditional Sale of Automobile,” is the one that evidences the final agreement of the parties. It contains a provision to the effect that it shall be construed as a “lease,” with an option on the part of plaintiff to acquire title to the truck for the sum of one dollar, *160 subject to a compliance With his covenants therein contained and payment of the notes according to their terms and conditions. Though the parties designated their contract as a “lease,” it was, as held on a former appeal in this case (40 Cal. App. 679, [182 Pac. 52]), a contract for the conditional sale of the truck.

To induce plaintiff to enter into the contract, pay the $500, and execute his notes for the balance of the $1,650, defendant, so the complaint alleges and the court finds, falsely and fraudulently represented that the truck had a carrying capacity of one ton. Upon this phase of the case the court found substantially as follows: At the time he entered into the contract plaintiff had no knowledge regarding such trucks and so informed defendant, and told his that he would have to rely upon defendant’s representations. At that time plaintiff, who was engaged in the ■ business of' selling and delivering ice, informed defendant that he needed a truck with a capacity of and capable of. carrying and conveying from one to one and one-quarter tons of freight, and that he could not use a truck of a less carrying capacity. Defendant thereupon represented to plaintiff that the truck in question was a ton truck, that it had a hauling capacity sufficient for plaintiff’s business, and"that it would easily carry and haul one and one-quarter tons of freight. Plaintiff relied upon defendant’s representation as to the truck’s carrying capacity and believed it to be tr,ue. Defendant’s representation was false and fraudulent, the actual carrying capacity being but 1,500 pounds, or three-quarters of a ton. On August 26, 1913, plaintiff discovered that the truck was not a ton truck, and that its carrying capacity was but 1,500 pounds.

The theory of the action is that, after discovering the falsity of defendant’s representation, plaintiff rescinded the contract. The findings upon this branch of the case are substantially as follows: On September 18, 1914, defendant demanded payment of plaintiff’s note for $100—the first of the twelve notes to fall due. Although the note had become due and payable on September 13, 1914, plaintiff refused to pay it unless defendant furnished him with a ton truck. Instead of paying the note, plaintiff, at defendant’s request, -on said eighteenth day of September, 1914, which was twenty-three days after plaintiff had discovered the *161 falsity of the representation, returned the truck to defendant, who ever since has had possession. Plaintiff returned the truck because it was not as it had been represented to be and because it could not be successfully used by him in his business. Defendant never furnished plaintiff with a truck having a carrying capacity of one ton. Prior to the commencement of the action, but about two months after the return of the truck, plaintiff demanded a return of the $500, which defendant refuses to pay.

The case has been in the district court of appeal twice before. On the first appeal (34 Cal. App. 24, [166 Pac. 861]) defendant appealed from a judgment in favor of plaintiff. On that appeal the judgment for plaintiff was reversed on the ground that the only attempted rescission, as shown by the pleadings and findings then before the court, was a rescission of the contract evidenced by the writing executed on August 12th, which, as pointed out by the court on that appeal, did not evidence the final agreement between the parties, their respective obligations being measured by the terms of the instrument executed August 13th, entitled “Lease and Conditional Sale of Automobile,” the very existence of which was, at that time, denied by plaintiff.

On the going down of the remittitur, following the decision on the first appeal, plaintiff filed a second amended complaint containing two counts. In the first he alleges facts which, if true, he insists show a rescission of the contract as evidenced by the last executed instrument. The second count in the amended complaint is a common count for money had and received by defendant for plaintiff’s use and benefit. A trial was had of the issues "tendered by this amended complaint, judgment passed for defendant, and thereupon plaintiff appealed. That appeal was upon the judgment-roll alone. Plaintiff, as the appellant on that appeal, claimed that, on the findings made by the court on the second trial, he was entitled to a judgment for the $500 that he had paid on account of the purchase price, with interest thereon from the date of payment. The appellate court held with him in this contention, and reversed the judgment with directions to the lower court “to enter judgment upon the findings in favor of plaintiff for $500, *162 together with interest thereon from August 2, 1914, and costs” (40 Cal. App. 679, [182 Pac. 52]).

Upon the going down of the remittitur after the second appeal, the. trial court, pursuant to the appellate court’s instruction, entered a judgment on the findings in favor of plaintiff for $500, with interest thereon from August 12, 1914. The present appeal is from that judgment, defendant claiming that the evidence taken at the second trial is insufficient to justify certain of the findings upon which, on the second appeal, the appellate court ordered judgment to be entered in plaintiff’s favor. Because the judgment that was the first to be entered on those findings (the judgment that was reversed on the second appeal) was in defendant’s favor, this is the first opportunity he has had to attack the findings by an appeal from the judgment. That he now does, claiming insufficiency of the evidence to justify such of the findings as show a rescission. It thus will be seen that the main question presented to us on this appeal did not, and, in the nature of the case, could not, arise on either of the two previous appeals. On the first appeal the contract that plaintiff then claimed had been rescinded was not the contract as finally agreed to by the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 P. 47, 52 Cal. App. 158, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-anthony-calctapp-1921.