Peskin v. United Lumber Co.

190 Cal. App. 2d 259, 11 Cal. Rptr. 860, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2292
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 1961
DocketCiv. No. 24396
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 190 Cal. App. 2d 259 (Peskin v. United Lumber Co.) 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
Peskin v. United Lumber Co., 190 Cal. App. 2d 259, 11 Cal. Rptr. 860, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2292 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

WOOD, P. J.

Action to recover money allegedly due on accounts receivable or, in the alternative, to recover damages for fraudulently inducing plaintiff to purchase the accounts. In a nonjury trial, judgment was for plaintiff for part of the amount claimed. Defendant appeals from the judgment; and contends that evidence was insufficient to support the findings as to liability, and that the court erred in not making findings on certain issues.

Plaintiff appeals from the portion of the judgment which awards plaintiff only $5,433.88;. and he contends that the judgment should have included an additional amount of $2,708.55 (the amount of two additional invoices).

Plaintiff, Joseph Peskin, who was doing business as the Aetna Factors Company, was in the business of purchasing accounts receivable. On March 4, 1954, plaintiff and M. E. Wright Lumber Company (a partnership) entered into a contract whereby plaintiff agreed to “buy at the net face amount of invoices all accounts receivable created by its [Wright’s] sales’’ of lumber. Defendant Archie M. Halladay, who was doing business as United Lumber Company (a partnership), was a customer of Wright Lumber Company. Halladay will be referred to as the defendant. Between March 5, 1954, and April 15, 1954, plaintiff purchased from Wright Lumber Company 13 accounts receivable which were evidenced by invoices which showed, or purported to show, sales of lumber to defendant. Defendant paid to plaintiff the amounts of the first 7 invoices. This action is to recover from defendant the amounts of the 6 other invoices. The alleged defense was that defendant did not receive the lumber referred to in those invoices. Plaintiff asserted (1) that defendant was estopped to deny the validity of the 6 invoices or (2) that defendant fraudulently induced plaintiff to purchase the 6 invoices.

[261]*261The dates, number, and amounts of the 13 invoices referred to above were as follows:

Invoice Invoice Pace Amount

Date No. of Invoice

3/5 7998 1409.00

3/5 7999 1268.48

3/15 8042 1278.13

3/22 8071 1340.53

3/26 8088 1355.45

3/26 8089 1346.87

3/26 8096 1373.00

3/26 8099 1480.29

4/6 8128 1357.59

4/6 8129 1353.11

4/9 8159 1376.31

4/12 8169 1357.20

4/12 8170 1351.35

Defendant received the lumber referred to in the first two invoices, but he did not receive the lumber referred to in the other invoices. On March 23, 1954, plaintiff’s auditors sent a letter to defendant in which they asked him to verify his account with plaintiff as represented by the first 3 invoices. Defendant did not reply to the letter. Defendant’s check (dated March 26, 1954) in payment of the first 2 invoices (7998 and 7999) was received by plaintiff on March 29, 1954. That check was payable to and endorsed by Wright Lumber Company. Defendant’s cheek (dated March 26, 1954) in payment of the 3d and 4th invoices (8042 and 8071) was received by plaintiff on March 29, 1954; he paid the 5th invoice on April 7, 1954; and he paid the 7th and 8th invoices on April 15, 1954. Defendant paid the 5 invoices last referred to (invoices 8042, 8071, 8088, 8096, and 8099) although he had not received the lumber referred to in those invoices. Defendant testified that he paid the amounts of those invoices with funds he received from Wright through an exchange of checks with Wright. The matter of exchange of checks will be referred to later herein. On April 29, 1954, plaintiff sent a letter to defendant in which he demanded payment of his “past due account” in the amount of $5,433.88. (The amounts of invoices 8089, 8128, 8129, and 8159.) On May 6, 1954, attorneys for plaintiff forwarded a letter to defendant demanding payment of the same amount ($5,433.88), and in the letter they listed and referred to [262]*262invoices 8089, 8128, 8129, and 8159 only. On May 21, 1954, defendant forwarded a letter to plaintiff’s attorneys in which he stated that he had not received the lumber referred to in invoices 8089, 8128, 8129, and 8159, and in the letter he requested that plaintiff, as assignee, issue credit memoranda for these invoices. The present action was commenced on August 25, 1954, and is based on those four invoices (8089, 8128, 8129, 8159), and on invoices 8169 and 8170 which were dated April 12, 1954.

It is not disputed that Wright presented to plaintiff, with the first 11 of the 13 invoices listed above, receipts, or purported receipts, for the lumber referred to therein, and freight bills, or purported freight bills, showing delivery of the lumber; that M. B. Wright forged the names appearing on the receipts for the lumber referred to in invoices 8042, 8071, 8088, 8089, 8096, 8099, 8128, 8129, and 8159 (all except the first two and the last two) and that M. E. Wright forged the names on the freight bills purporting to show delivery of the lumber referred to in those invoices; and that plaintiff mailed, and defendant received, the originals of all those invoices. With respect to invoices 8169 and 8170 (the last two) Albert Peskin, manager of plaintiff’s business, testified that, when those invoices were presented to plaintiff, receipts and freight bills were attached thereto, and that the original invoices were mailed to defendant. Defendant testified that he did not receive those two invoices.

Prior to March 4, 1954 (the date of the contract between plaintiff and Wright), Wright sold to another factor (Gibson Factors) 17 accounts receivable represented by invoices which showed, or purported to show, sales of lumber to defendant. Defendant received the lumber referred to in 5 of those invoices ; he did not receive the lumber referred to in the other 32 invoices. The first of the 12 invoices, referring to lumber which defendant did not receive, was dated December 29, 1953, and the last one was dated February 26, 1954. In each instance, Wright delivered to defendant a check for the amount of the invoice, and defendant forwarded his check to the factor for the same amount. A similar procedure was followed with respect to the payment by defendant to plaintiff of the amounts of invoices 8042, 8071, 8088, 8096, and 8099 (the 5 invoices Wright sold to plaintiff referring to lumber defendant did not receive). In each instance, Wright delivered to defendant a check for the amount of the invoice, and defendant forwarded his check to plaintiff for the same [263]*263amount. Defendant testified that the arrangement for exchanging cheeks was the result of his conversation with an independent salesman who sold lumber for Wright and through whom he (defendant) made all of his purchases from Wright. He testified further that the salesman assured him that the arrangement had been approved by an attorney, and by Gibson Factors, and by plaintiff.

The court found as follows: Plaintiff mailed to defendant the original and a copy of each of the 13 invoices on the date of purchase of each invoice or upon the following day. Defendant received all invoices except 8169 and 8170. Wright represented that the lumber described on each of the invoices had been delivered to defendant on the date appearing thereon and that defendant had actual knowledge of such representation. A course of business had arisen between Wright and defendant prior to the time plaintiff began to buy receivables.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 Cal. App. 2d 259, 11 Cal. Rptr. 860, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peskin-v-united-lumber-co-calctapp-1961.