Melone v. Ruffino

62 P. 93, 129 Cal. 514, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1015
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1667.
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 62 P. 93 (Melone v. Ruffino) 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
Melone v. Ruffino, 62 P. 93, 129 Cal. 514, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1015 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

THE COURT

Action on a contract, entered into by defendant’s testator and plaintiff’s assignor for the sale of land by the former to the latter, to recover the deposit made by plaintiff on account of the purchase. Plaintiff had judgment for the amount of deposit, to wit, nine hundred and twenty-two dollars and fifty cents, being ten per cent of the purchase price of the land, and also for interest thereon from June 10, 1893, amounting in all to twelve hundred and thirty-six dollars and eighty cents, and for costs. Defendant appeals from the judgment on bill of exceptions. The contracts, the subject of the action, read as follows:

“San Francisco, May 19, 1892.
“I hereby authorize . . . . Joost, Mertens & Company to sell .... for me at any time within thirty days from the date hereof, and thereafter until this authority is revoked by me in writing, for the sum of nine thousand net dollars .... or any less sum that I may accept for said property, that certain real property in the city and county of San Francisco [here follows description, being a portion of Mission Block Ho. 83’]. And "I further authorize and empower said Joost, Mertens & Company, in case of sale .... to accept, as my agents, a deposit of ten per cent on the selling price as part payment thereof, and to execute to the purchaser, in my behalf and as my agents, a valid contract of sale of said property upon such reasonable terms as to examination of title and consummation of the sale as are equitable, usual, and customary, and as appear more particularly in their form of ‘contract receipt’ printed on the back hereof, which I hereby approve and ratify. I further agree to furnish free of charge, for examination of title, such abstract of the property as I may have at the time the same is- *517 sold. This authorization is irrevocable during the term of this contract. L. J. RUFFINO,
“Administrator of the Estate of Petrona Ruffino, Deceased.”

Pursuant to this authorization, Joost, Mertens & Co. made a sale to one Walker, plaintiff’s assignor, and a deposit of ten per cent of the price named (nine thousand two hundred and twenty-five dollars) was made June 10, 1892, by plaintiff with Ruffino’s said agents. A contract receipt in the form referred to in the authorization was signed as follows: “L. J. Ruffino et al. [Seal] By Joost, Mertens & Company, [Seal] Agents. W. D. Walker. [Seal]” This receipt recited that the deposit was on account of the purchase price of the property (describing it). “Fifteen days are allowed to examine title and consummate sale. At the termination of the aforesaid time the balance of said purchase money is due and payable upon tender of the deed of the property sold; if the title is found defective, the purchaser is to state his objections to their title in writing, and the seller is to perfect the title within thirty days after the expiration of the time first allowed for examination or any extension thereof, unless the title cannot be perfected within said thirty days, in which event the same shall be perfected within a reasonable time thereafter.....If the sale is not consummated according to the foregoing conditions, the deposit is to be forfeited.....If the title cannot be perfected within the above-mentioned times, the deposit is to be returned..... The said W. D. Walker and L. J. Ruffino et al. hereby agree to comply with the conditions of this contract”; signed as above stated. L. J. Ruffino, at the time he signed the authorization, was administrator of the estate of Petrona C. de Ruffino, and so continued to be until June 27, 1895, when he died, leaving a will naming defendant as the executrix thereof, and she duly qualified August 18, 1897; Petrona was the mother of L. J. Ruffino, and he and his sisters were heirs to her estate. Mr. Mertens, one of the firm of Joost, Mertens & Co., testified that L. J. signed the contract in his own office, in San Francisco, in the presence of Mertens, on the day of its date.

1. The court found that Ruffino had “failed .... to return said deposit or any part thereof; and no part thereof has been repaid or paid to the said plaintiff or his assignor.” The *518 complaint alleges failure and refusal by Ruffino “to return said deposit or any part thereof, although often requested so to do.” The answer denies these allegations, and the finding of the court is challenged for insufficient evidence to support it.

It is not necessary to determine whether the evidence was-sufficient to warrant the finding of nonpayment—if proof of nonpayment by plaintiff had been necessary. Where a plaintiff has proved the existence of_a debt sued on—at least, within the period of statutory limitation-rdffi££nEdenjrLpmving_pay=.. ment is on the defendant. That this is the rule at common law no one can doubt; and we have no statutory law changing it. Greenleaf states it as follows: “The defense of payment may be made under the general issue, in assumpsit; but, in an action for debt on a specialty or on a record, it must be specially pleaded. In either case the burden of proof is on the defendant, who must prove the payment of money, or something accepted in its stead, made to the plaintiff, or to some person authorized in his behalf to receive it.” In Cowen & Hill’s Motes to Phillips on Evidence, volume 1, side page 810, the authors, quoting from an authority and citing others, give the rule in this language: “The principle that he who alleges himself to be the creditor of another is obliged to prove the fact of agreement upon which his claim is founded, when it is contested; and that, on the other hand, when the obligation is proved, the debtor who alleges that he has discharged it is obliged to prove the payment, is clearly one of those propositions in which every system of jurisprudence must concur in general, whatever particular rules may be adopted, as to the mode and form of the allegations, by which the necessity of such proof is to be determined.” The same rule has been recognized and declared frequently in this state. In Caulfield v. Sanders, 17 Cal. 569, -the suit was upon an indebtedness alleged to be due from the defendant, who was an attorney at law. He averred in his answer that the principal part of the alleged indebtedness was due from his clients and not from him personally, and that the part for which he was personally liable had been paid. Field, C. J., delivering the opinion of the court, said: “This is in substance a denial of indebtedness for a portion of the account, and a plea of payment for the bal *519 anee. It is, in effect, an admission as to that balance of an original liability, and throws the burden of establishing the payment upon the defendant.” Further on he says: “The issue thus formed cast upon the plaintiff the necessity of separating the different charges, and of establishing a liability as to those items which were incurred for clients of the defendant, and cast upon the defendant the necessity of proving a payment of the balance.”

In Lisman v. Early, 15 Cal. 199, the suit was on a note, and the answer pleaded payment. As proof of his defense defendant offered in evidence some receipts from the plaintiff. Plaintiff offered rebutting evidence tending to show that these receipts were for payments on an open account, and not on the note.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P. 93, 129 Cal. 514, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melone-v-ruffino-cal-1900.