Poswa v. Jones

132 P. 629, 21 Cal. App. 664, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1198.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 P. 629 (Poswa v. Jones) 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
Poswa v. Jones, 132 P. 629, 21 Cal. App. 664, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 260 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HALL, J.

This is an appeal by defendants from a judgment rendered against them for the sum of $150.37, and costs taxed at $128.60.

Plaintiff sued to recover of defendants the sum of $663.17 as the unpaid balance of the price of certain oil sold by the Sterling Paint Company, a corporation, to defendants, copartners doing business under the firm name and style of American Dry Color Co. The claim of the Sterling Paint Co. was assigned to plaintiff. The complaint was unverified.

The defendants answered, and besides denying the allegations of the complaint, pleaded various counterclaims. One of these counterclaims set up a claim for fifteen dollars, for commissions earned by defendants in selling two barrels of oil for the Sterling Paint Company.

Another set up a claim for $22.28 for goods sold to said company by defendants.

*666 The others set up claims for damages arising out of breach of warranties as to quality of oil alleged to have been sold to defendants by the Sterling Paint Company, before the assignment to plaintiff, aggregating the sum of upwards of nine hundred dollars. In each case the oil had been resold by defendants upon the same warranty, and defendants had been obliged to pay to their vendees the amount of damage claimed. In one ease the amount of the damage in the sum of $341 had not been ascertained nor paid by the defendants to their vendee until after the beginning of the action, but in each case the sale and breach of warranty had occurred before the assignment to plaintiff.

The court found all the allegations of the first count of plaintiff’s complaint to be true. (The second count contains a statement in another form of the same claim, and may be disregarded.)

The court also found “That each and all of the allegations set forth in defendants’ last amended answer are true and. correct, save and except that said defendants suffered and sustained loss and damage in the sum of five hundred twenty-five and 40/100 ($525.40) dollars, and no more, by reason of the facts set forth and complained of in said defendants’ last amended answer and counterclaims, and which the said defendants are entitled to plead as a defense and set-off against plaintiff’s cause of action, herein found to be true.”

And as a conclusion of law the court decided that plaintiff was entitled to judgment for $137.77, the difference between the demand of plaintiff ($663.17) and the damages found in favor of defendants ($525.40), together with interest from the commencement of the action ($12.05) and costs of suit.

Judgment was entered accordingly.

The first point presented by appellants is that the finding made by the court as to the amount of damages suffered by defendants by reason of the facts pleaded in defendants ’ counterclaims is not a finding of fact at all, but is a conclusion of law. This contention is based upon the qualifying effect of the last portion of the matter set forth in the finding in question. It is argued that by the words, “and) which the said defendants are entitled to plead as a defense and set-off against plaintiff’s cause of action herein found to be true,” the entire finding upon the subject of damages is made to de *667 pend) upon what damages the court may have considered that defendants were entitled as a matter of law to plead by way of defense and set-off to plaintiff’s cause of action.

Technically this, we think, must be conceded to be true. The finding is very much like a finding that all the material allegations of a complaint are true. Such a finding has been held to be insufficient as a finding of fact to support a judgment.

But it does not necessarily follow that defendants have been injured by the faulty character of the finding in question. The finding which the court made that all the allegations of the first count of the complaint were true would support a judgment for plaintiff for the principal sum of $663.17. The court however made a deduction from such sum in the amount of $525.40, being the damages .that the court found that defendants had suffered by reason of the facts pleaded in the counterclaims. The court thus treated the finding as a good finding to the effect that defendants had suffered damages to the extent of $525.40, by reason of the breaches of the warranties, and gave the defendants the benefit of such finding by making a deduction from the amount of plaintiff’s demand in that amount. It is thus apparent that defendants have not been injured by the faulty character of the finding unless the evidence introduced upon the trial would support a straight finding- that defendants suffered damage in excess of $525.40. .Accordingly appellants have brought up in a bill of exceptions the evidence which they claim proves without conflict that defendants suffered damage in the sum of $654.50.

We have examined this evidence with care, and are satisfied that it does not show that defendants suffered any damage in excess of $525.40 by reason of any breach of warranties by plaintiff’s assignor. The evidence of two witnesses only appears in the record. Each gave evidence as to damages suffered by him upon certain jobs of painting done by himself and for which damages the defendants reimbursed the witness. But nowhere does it appear that any oil sold by plaintiff’s assignor to defendants was used upon such jobs. There does not appear to be any connection between the damage suffered by these witnesses and made good to them by defendants, and the breach of the warranty upon the sale of oil by plaintiff’s assignor to defendants. There is thus no evidence *668 in the bill of exceptions that defendants suffered any damage at all by reason of the breaches of warranties pleaded in the counterclaims.

The case is thus within the rule that when the findings support the judgment, an omission to find upon an affirmative defense cannot be complained of by a defendant, unless the record discloses some evidence that would support a finding in favor of defendant. (Senter v. Senter, 70 Cal. 619, [11 Pac. 782]; Estate of Carpenter, 127 Cal. 582, [60 Pac. 162] ; Cutting Fruit Co. v. Canty, 141 Cal. 692, [75 Pac. 564]; Eva v. Symons, 145 Cal. 202, [78 Pac. 648]; McKelvey v. Wagy, 157 Cal. 406, [108 Pac. 268]; People v. McCue, 150 Cal. 195, [88 Pac. 899]; Roberts v. Hall, 147 Cal. 434, [82 Pac. 66].)

The defendants in the judgment that was rendered received the benefit of the finding that they had suffered damages, by the breach of the warranties, in the sum of $525.40. There being in. the record no evidence that would support a finding for damages in that regard for any greater amount, they cannot complain of the faulty character of the finding actually made.

The defendants, however, are under the findings entitled to a further deduction from the amount found to be due plaintiff.

As before stated, two of the counterclaims are not for claims to offset damages, but were upon express contracts to pay certain definite and agreed sums of money.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P. 629, 21 Cal. App. 664, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poswa-v-jones-calctapp-1913.