Lupton v. Domestic Utilities Mfg. Co.

160 P. 241, 173 Cal. 415, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 426
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1916
DocketSac. No. 2214.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 160 P. 241 (Lupton v. Domestic Utilities Mfg. 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
Lupton v. Domestic Utilities Mfg. Co., 160 P. 241, 173 Cal. 415, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 426 (Cal. 1916).

Opinion

*416 LAWLOR, J.

This is an action for the rescission of . a contract for the purchase of a certain agent’s contract and a quantity of washing machines, to cancel a promissory note given in payment thereof, and to obtain the reconveyance of certain real property given as security for the note. The relief is sought principally upon the ground of false and fraudulent representations by which the plaintiff was induced to enter into the contract. The defendants, excepting the Domestic Utilities Manufacturing Company, which was not served with summons, answered denying the fraud and the other material allegations of the complaint, and at the trial, after the close of the plaintiff’s case, moved for a non-suit, which was denied. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff as prayed. The defendants appeal from the judgment, alleging as error, among other things, the refusal of the court to order a nonsuit. An appeal is also taken from the order, denying the motion for a new trial.

The alleged false and fraudulent representations, and the general operations of the defendant company and its agents in their efforts to dispose of the “tin vacuum clothes washers or clothes pounders,” and certain “so called ‘valuable’ Agent’s Contracts,” which the plaintiff was induced to buy, are substantially similar and in many respects identical with the frauds shown in the case of Brown v. Domestic Utilities Manufacturing Company, 172 Cal. 733, [159 Pac. 163]. In considering that case this court declared the frauds established by the evidence to be “so gross that equity would lend all of its legitimate powers to relieve plaintiff from the effects of them.” We must be no less vigilant here. It appears from the record that there was an exhaustive inquiry into the merits of the case. The evidence is full and complete and convinces-us that the-entire scheme of the company is founded in fraud. The tenor of the circulars distributed at its instance, the spurious methods employed in the demonstrations, and the studiously drawn form of contract, all reveal a plan of the company for the alleged disposal of its wares which involves fraud in its every aspect—contemplating an endless chain of victims, each one in turn to recoup his own loss and make a profit by victimizing others. This is "the meaning which must be attached to what is termed in the company’s form of contract “the line of succession,” especially when studied in the light of the evidence. For *417 instance, William Lupton, one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, testified: “Mr. Ensminger told me like this: I said it looks like a kind of a skin game; he said you skin this man, he skins the other one, and he has then to skin the other one; there would be nobody hurt only the last man; he says, what is that to us, he says, we may be under the ground at that time.” But it will not be necessary to enumerate in detail the particulars wherein it appears that the plaintiff was defrauded. It is sufficient to state that the court found that plaintiff, who “is a woman ignorant of business and its methods,” became interested in the sale of the “tin vacuum clothes washers or clothes pounders,” and the “so called ‘valuable’ Agent’s Contracts,” issued and sold by the Domestic Utilities Manufacturing Company; that she had various conversations with the defendants Ensmingers, who represented the company as its agents, in regard to the efficiency and value of the washers, and the advisability of investing her money in the venture; that she was also encouraged by the Ensmingers to attend certain public demonstrations, held under the auspices of the company, as to “the manner in which it was claimed said tin vacuum clothes washers or clothes pounders would wash all articles generally found in a general family wash as thoroughly and as quickly as the articles the said demonstrators, so called, used for their demonstrations”; that, as a matter of fact, such demonstrations were “false and fake demonstrations,'and were not in good faith”; that at these demonstrations large wall charts were used in order to explain the manner in which an investment in the washers and an agent’s contract would realize large and profitable returns; that these representations made “as to the ability of the plaintiff to make large sums of money greatly to exceed her original investment, were highly colored and distorted by reference to ‘prospects,’ ‘lines of succession, ’ ‘deals to be turned,’ ‘new territory to be opened,’ ‘transfers of bills of goods,’ ” all of which “were designed to prey upon the ignorance of the plaintiff, were false, and were made in a manner fitted to deceive plaintiff”; that plaintiff, believing and relying upon what was told her, purchased of defendants Ensmingers, as agents of the company, one of the agent’s contracts and 1,667 washers, with the privilege of appointing other agents, transferring to them the washers she had purchased, and receiving certain com *418 missions therefor; that in payment for these alleged privileges the plaintiff gave her promissory note in the sum of five thousand dollars, and executed a deed of trust to a certain house and lot to the defendants Sam H. Zimmerman and William Siegalkoff, as trustees, which property was of the value of about eight thousand dollars. As above stated, it is to cancel this note and to regain the property given as security that plaintiff brings this action.

The court also found that the agent’s contract, in fact, “is and was valueless and worth nothing to the plaintiff or to any one else,” while the “tin vacuum clothes washers or clothes pounders are of no value for the doing of general family washing or for any other purpose.”

These findings are attacked upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to sustain them. It is also contended that the judgment is erroneous because the representations made were merely matters of opinion; that, in any event, plaintiff was not entitled to relief for the reason that she had failed to investigate the truth of the representations; and that she had no right to rely upon the statements made by the defendants as they did not occupy confidential relations with her, were interested parties, and had only recently invested in the business themselves. We have carefully examined all these contentions, and the evidence appertaining thereto, and find they have no merit. The representations, for the most part, were more than mere matters of opinion, and were made in such positive terms that the plaintiff was justified, in relying upon them without making an independent investigation.

We must, however, reverse the judgment on the ground that the plaintiff failed to effect a rescission of the contract prior to the commencement of the action. This was one of the grounds of the motion for a nonsuit. The other grounds were that the testimony of the plaintiff showed that she had waived the fraud after discovering the facts which entitled her to rescind, and that she was guilty of laches in not having used reasonable diligence in rescinding promptly upon becoming aware of her right of rescission. In our opinion, there is no force to either of these contentions. The sole question to be determined, therefore, is whether the “notice, tender and demand,” which the plaintiff served upon the defendants, was sufficient to constitute a proper *419 rescission of the contract and entitle her to the relief she seeks.

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Bluebook (online)
160 P. 241, 173 Cal. 415, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lupton-v-domestic-utilities-mfg-co-cal-1916.