Knight v. Bentel

179 P. 406, 39 Cal. App. 502, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 172
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2872.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 179 P. 406 (Knight v. Bentel) 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
Knight v. Bentel, 179 P. 406, 39 Cal. App. 502, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 172 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

This is an action by Ellen Stuart Bentley, who, since the institution of the action, has died, and which action is now being prosecuted by F. A. Knight, who, by proper order heretofore made and entered, has been substituted as plaintiff in place and stead of said Ellen Stuart Bentley, against the defendants herein. From the record in the case it appears that on January 24, 1914, the said Ellen Stuart Bentley signed an agreement with the defendants whereby she agreed to buy from the defendants a Mercer automobile, for the total price of $3,150, payable $850 at the *504 time of the signing of the contract (payment of which was acknowledged therein), $750 on delivery of the car (which car was to be delivered March 17, 1914), and the balance of the purchase price to be paid in three equal monthly installments. A clause was added to the agreement whereby the defendants were to sell for the plaintiff a Metallurgique car, which the said Ellen Stuart Bentley then owned, as a condition of the contract.

Some time between the signing of the agreement and the thirteenth day of May, 1914, the defendants sold Mrs. Bentley’s Metallurgique automobile for $1,250, which they credited on her contract for the Mercer car as of May 14, 1914. The Mercer car was not delivered on March 17th, nor was any car delivered to her by the defendants herein until May 13, 1914. On May 13, 1914, Mrs. Bentley went to the place of business of the defendants, about dusk, was taken for a short ride in the machine to see how it ran, and, without close examination of the car, accepted the same. The car had no seat on the running-board, as provided for in said agreement, and was not of the color called for—“which could be seen at a glance”—but a memorandum was given the said Mrs. Bentley by defendants whereby they, the defendants, agreed that these changes were to be made later. The next morning, upon a closer examination of the car, Mrs. Bentley discovered that it was a second-hand car and had been used and run a great deal. She immediately, on the same day, to wit, May 14, 1914, drove the ear back to defendants’ place of business, told defendants she refused to accept the car, and demanded the return of her money. Defendants refused to comply with this demand, but told her that they would order a new car. She refused to buy a new car from them, and left the Mercer with the defendants.

Upon making these discoveries, Mrs. Bentley served a notice of rescission of the contract, signed by her, and sued for the return of her money. When the answer of defendants to that suit was filed they set up an entirely different contract as having been executed by the plaintiff on the day the car was delivered to her, to wit, May 13, 1914. She then demanded an inspection of the original of said document, and claims to have then ascertained, for the first time, that when the car was delivered to her she had signed an entirely different document, which was a “lease” of the automobile. She *505 then remembered the circumstances of having signed the document, and claims that her signature thereto was obtained by a fraud and a trick of the defendants. Mrs. Bentley then dismissed her first suit and served a new notice of rescission of the first agreement and the second document just referred to, and filed her complaint in this action. It is in four counts: The first for money had and received; the second based on failure of consideration; the third based upon partial failure of consideration, and the fourth for the recovery of the money and the revocation of the lease, upon the ground that her signature to the lease was obtained by fraud and trick perpetrated by the defendants. No copy of either of said instruments was given by defendants to plaintiff. Judgment was given for the plaintiff for the recovery of her money, and defendants have appealed to this court for a reversal of that judgment.

It was stipulated at the trial that the defendants had been paid by the said Mrs. Bentley the sum of two thousand six hundred dollars, on the following dates: October 27, 1913, one hundred dollars; January 24, 1914, $750; May 14, 1914 (proceeds from the sale of the Metallurgique car), $1,250, and May 14, 1914, five hundred dollars.

Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the trial court. We are satisfied from a carefu.1 examination of the record in this case that the evidence abundantly supports the findings of the court. The witness Buddie is the representative of the defendants with whom Mrs. Bentley had almost all of her business dealings in connection with the purchase, etc., of the car in question. There is no dispute as to the fact that the contract, Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1, was signed by Mrs. Bentley on January 24, 1914, and that by the terms of that agreement the said Mercer-car was to be delivered on or about March 17th of the same year. This was not done. But when Mrs. Bentley heard, some time in May, 1914, that the car had arrived, she went to the place of business of the defendants, which, according to the record, was on May 13, 1914, and about noon of that day. At that time she was told that the car was not ready for delivery; that they were putting, on some wire wheels, etc., and agreed to have it ready for delivery at about 4 o’clock that afternoon. It was not ready for delivery, however, until about 5:30 or 6 o’clock. After looking the car over from the *506 outside, without making anything that might be considered an “examination” of it, she was taken out, as has already been set forth herein, for a short ride. She then paid five hundred dollars in cash and took the car with her to Long Beach that night. Before this took place, however, there was some talk about payments, and the witness Ruddle said he would arrange it to suit her, and, as she understood it, and as shown by the evidence, the contract of January 24th was modified only as to the amounts of payments and the time when the balance due on the car should be paid. Mrs. Bentley says that Mr. Ruddle said to her, “Mrs. Bentley, here is a similar contract to the one which you signed previously, only it will make the payments easier for you, and according to your request.” Mrs. Bentley further says that she looked over and read that portion of the same as to payments and accepted Mr. Ruddle’s word that it was a “similar contract,” and, in answer to a question from the court as to whether she relied on anything else besides that, answered that she did not. In view of- the record here, we feel that the attorney for Mrs. Bentley in this ease, when writing to defendants under date of May 15, 1914, was correct when he said that their “methods of dealing with Mrs. Bentley in this matter have been so outrageously unbusinesslike and unfair.”

There is no conflict in the evidence that Mrs. Bentley was buying a new car, nor is there any conflict in the evidence that the defendants represented to her that they were selling her a new car, and that the car delivered to her on May 13, 1914, was such a car.

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Bluebook (online)
179 P. 406, 39 Cal. App. 502, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-bentel-calctapp-1919.