Ocean Shore Development Co. v. Hammond

175 P. 706, 38 Cal. App. 102, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 104
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2432.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 175 P. 706 (Ocean Shore Development Co. v. Hammond) 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
Ocean Shore Development Co. v. Hammond, 175 P. 706, 38 Cal. App. 102, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 104 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This action is based on a contract for the purchase and sale of three lots in San Mateo County. By the terms of the contract the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff the sum of $2,125 as the purchase price of the lots, in installments as follows: three hundred dollars on the signing of the contract and the balance at the rate of $35 per month thereafter until paid ; the title to the property was to remain *104 in the vendor until the installments were paid. The defendant paid the sum of three hundred dollars on the signing of the contract and the first installment of $35. No further installments were paid.

At the time of the commencement of this action, forty-six installments amounting to the principal sum of $1,610 had become due under the contract. The balance of the installments, amounting to $180, had not yet become due.

This action was brought to foreclose a lien which the vendor had on the property for the purchase price. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained and an amended complaint filed. The plaintiff asked that the property be sold to satisfy the amount then due, namely, $1,821.15, and that if the proceeds of the sale were insufficient to satisfy the amount of said lien, then that a personal deficiency judgment be docketed against the defendant.

The defendant answered the amended complaint, and, after denying certain allegations therein, set up four separate defenses, numbered and referred to as “second,” “third,” “fourth,” and “fifth” defenses, respectively. The “fifth” defense was conceded by the plaintiff and the contract reformed in accordance therewith, and need not concern us here. The “second” defense recited that prior to the commencement of this action, the defendant in this action commenced an action in the superior court of the state of California in and for the county of Mono against the plaintiff herein, entitled J. P. Hammond, Plaintiff, v. Ocean Shore Development Co., Inc., a Corporation, Defendant, in which said Hammond sought to recover from the said Ocean Shore Development Co., Inc., the sum of $335 paid under the said contract upon the ground of fraud and false representations made to him by the said Ocean Shore Development Co., Inc., concerning the character and situation of the property. That the Ocean Shore Development Company failed to set up in its answer. any counterclaim for damages or for the purchase price of the property or any of the installments thereof.

The “third” defense set up a failure of consideration and then set forth, as a reason for said failure, certain alleged false representations made by Ocean Shore Development Co. to the said Hammond, which induced the said Hammond to enter into the said contract, and which said alleged false *105 representations were substantially the same as set forth in the complaint previously filed in Mono County by Hammond.

The “fourth” defense simply sets forth the same alleged false representations concerning the property, and the fact of a rescission of the contract by the defendant, based upon such alleged misrepresentations.

On April 14,1916, the balance of the installments under the contract having fallen due, the plaintiff filed a supplemental complaint setting forth that fact, and an amended supplemental complaint was thereafter filed by permission of the court obtained at the time of trial, and which alleged, by way of excusing a tender of a deed, that defendant had repudiated the contract.

At the close of plaintiff’s case, the defendant moved for a nonsuit; the motion was denied. The defendant then offered to prove the facts alleged in his “third” and “fourth” defenses concerning the alleged false representations made by plaintiff to defendant about the character of the property. The court sustained the plaintiff’s objection thereto for the reason that the judgment rendered against the defendant herein in the action of Hammond v. Ocean Shore Development Co. operated as an estoppel by judgment with regard to those matters.

Judgment was thereafter rendered against the defendant and in favor of the said plaintiff, by which it was decreed that the plaintiff has a lien upon the real property for the sum of $2,123.41, together with costs; that the property be sold to satisfy said lien, and that a personal judgment for the deficiency, if any, then be docketed against the defendant. The defendant appeals and advances many arguments for a reversal of the judgment.

One of the questions raised by defendant is whether this is in effect an action for specific performance or whether this is an action to. foreclose a vendor’s lien. We think that this was not an action for specific performance. The original complaint stated an action on contract for the amount of the unpaid installments and asked for a foreclosure of a vendor’s lien upon the land. At the trial, the defendant interposed a demurrer and argued that the complaint was analogous to one to enforce specific performance, and that facts sufficient to constitute such a cause of action had not been pleaded. The demurrer was sustained and the plaintiff amended its *106 complaint by adding an allegation that the price to be paid for the land under the contract was not disproportionate to the value of the land. In support of this allegation, the plaintiff introduced evidence of the market value of the land. The defendant contends that as the trial court, in ruling on the demurrer to the original complaint, determined that the action was substantially one for specific performance, and respondent voluntarily adopted the trial court’s theory and amended its complaint in accordance therewith, it cannot on appeal return to the position that the original complaint was sufficient. We think a return to such position is not necessary to sustain the judgment. Neither the prayer of the amended complaint nor of the supplemental complaint is for specific performance; the decree was not given for specific performance, and therefore could not have been rendered upon the theory that the plaintiff was entitled to such relief. But admitting that the allegations of the amended complaint were framed to state a ease for specific performance and that the court might have so decreed, yet the plaintiff asked and received of the court a relief that was clearly within the pleadings and therefore the defendant is not prejudiced. In code states, courts will render such judgments as the evidence and pleadings show the parties entitled to regardless of the form of action. (Lee v. Coon Rapids Nat. Bank, 166 Iowa, 242, [144 N. W. 630].)

In one of the cases relied upon by the defendant in support of his-contention (Woodson v. Metropolitan St. R. Co., 224 Mo. 685, [20 Ann. Cas. 1039, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 931, 123 S. W. 820]), the court said: “But further, an instruction cannot be broader than the pleadings although the facts may take a wider range, nor on the other hand can the instruction be broader than the facts proven, although the pleadings may take a broader range.” (Degonia v. St. Louis etc. R. Co., 224 Mo. 589, [123 S.W. 807].)

If the pleadings take a broader range than the facts proven, the court surely has power to give judgment for any relief to whmh the proof entitles the plaintiff.

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Related

Teague Investment Co. v. Setchel
186 P. 1046 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)

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175 P. 706, 38 Cal. App. 102, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-shore-development-co-v-hammond-calctapp-1918.