Prentice v. Zumwalt

13 P.2d 379, 124 Cal. App. 646, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 726
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 8, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4509.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 379 (Prentice v. Zumwalt) 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
Prentice v. Zumwalt, 13 P.2d 379, 124 Cal. App. 646, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 726 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

THOMPSON (R. L.), J.

The plaintiff brought suit to replevin farm machinery alleged to have been unlawfully, oppressively and maliciously seized and held by the defendant. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1550. A judgment was rendered accordingly. From this judgment the defendant has appealed.

It is -contended the judgment is not supported by the evidence; that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover possession of the property for the reason that the farm implements were lawfully taken by the defendant, and the plaintiff failed to tender the necessary amount to release the lien pursuant to which they were seized; and that the amount of punitive damages which was allowed is excessive.

The defendant owns and operates a farm implement business at Colusa. 'His son, -George Zumwalt, is employed in the business with the authority to accept and collect debts which are due to the enterprise. The plaintiff is a farmer who lives near Willows. In 1927 the plaintiff bought from the defendant upon an executory contract a binding machine. Part payment was made on the purchase price thereof. The following June it was returned by the plaintiff for the reason that he was unable to operate it successfully. The defendant subsequently resold the machine. A balance of $365, represented by an unsecured promissory note, re *649 mained unpaid upon this binder. This note was retained by the defendant. The plaintiff refused to pay it. At the same time the plaintiff owed the defendant another bill on open book account, for the purchase of other farm machinery. The plaintiff made a payment of $400 on this last-mentioned account, insisting that it be credited to that account. The bookkeeper gave him a receipt for this sum, applying the payment as requested. The defendant disregarded this demand and without the plaintiff’s knowledge credited the payment to the repudiated note of $365 and accumulated interest. The plaintiff also owed the Bank of Willows the sum of $500 represented by a promissory note secured by chattel mortgage on the farm machinery which is involved in this suit. The mortgage contained a clause authorizing the mortgagee, “at its option . . . (to) remove and sell and dispose of the same (mortgaged machinery) at public or private sale without any previous demand of performance or note to the mortgagor of any such sale whatsoever, notice of sale and demand of performance being hereby expressly waived by said mortgagor”.

On October 18, 1930, without the plaintiff’s knowledge, the defendant purchased this note and mortgage from the Bank of Willows, stating that he was about to bring suit against the plaintiff on the balance of the $365 note, and desired to attach the machinery described in the chattel mortgage; that he wanted to prevent the first lien of the chattel mortgage from defeating the validity of his proposed attachment. The indorsement on the bank note shows that a payment had been made to the bank the day before it was purchased by the defendant, leaving a balance due thereon of $457.76. Having acquired this bank note and mortgage, the defendant wrote the plaintiff demanding the payment of the other repudiated note for $365 which he held. The plaintiff and defendant met and conferred regarding this unsecured note. Nothing was said about the Bank of Willows note and mortgage. They were not mentioned. The plaintiff flatly refused to pay the unsecured note, saying that the machine which he had returned “would not work”.

Without previous notice or demand upon the plaintiff to pay the Bank of Willows note, the defendant, on April 2, 1931, sent four men and two trucks to the plaintiff’s ranch *650 with directions to seize and bring back the machinery. Over the strenuous protest of the plaintiff, the machinery was loaded and hauled away. During the time consumed in loading the machinery, the plaintiff hastened to his neighbor, Mr. C. F. Mason, and arranged to borrow from him the sxxm of $475 with which to pay the defendant in full for the Bank of Willows note. Mason went with the "plaintiff and tendered the cheek in payment of the note. The workmen refused to accept it, saying they had no authority to do so, bxxt on the contrary were directed to bring the machinery back. The plaintiff then tried to communicate with the defendant by telephone. He was unable to do so, but succeeded in communicating with his son, George, offering to pay the Bank of Willoxvs note in full. George refused the tender. The machinery was then haxxled away. The following day the plaintiff and his neighbor, Mason, took $510 in cash to the defendant’s place of business and offered to pay the note in full. George again refused the offer. The plaintiff said he offered to pay “whatever the face of the mortgage was, plxxs the interest. I figured the mortgage, interest and everything would hardly be $500.” The evidence is undisputed that Mason then had $470 in cash, and the plaintiff had $40 additional. In none of these conferences regarding the payment of the bank note did any of the parties object to the amount tendered or the manner of the proposed payment.

April 6, 1931, the plaintiff’s attorney wrote to the defendant reciting the circumstance of the arbitrary taking of the machinery, and the offer to pay the full amount of the mortgaged indebtedness. He then said: “Notwithstanding your unlawful taking of his property, Mr. Prentice is still willing to pay you the amoxxnt due on the promissory note above mentioned.” That same day the defendant pxxrports to have sold the machinery, valued at about $1600, to his son George, for $515. April 8th the defendant’s attorney answered the above-mentioned letter, saying that the plaintiff still oxved the defendant a balance of $406.78 on the unsecured. note which was in dispute, upon which he had commenced a suit in the justice’s court for $299.99, and that “All Zumwalt wants is the amount of the mortgage together with the amount sued on in the Justice’s Court. He "will not ask for the expenses of going after the machinery and *651 bringing it down here, but Prentice will have to take the machinery from here to his own place. ’ ’

The clear import of this letter is that the defendant was using the secured bank note and mortgage to enforce the payment of the disputed note. It amounted to a refusal to surrender possession of the machinery even upon full payment of the secured debt unless the plaintiff also paid the note which was in dispute. The defendant was therefore unlawfully using a secured debt as a club to enforce the pajnnent of another disputed claim. The tender was refused and the machinery was retained.

The plaintiff then commenced this suit to replevin the property and to secure actual and exemplary damages based upon the unlawful, oppressive and malicious seizing and retaining of the farm machinery. A bond was furnished and the machinery was returned. A jury found a verdict of $1550 in favor of the plaintiff. A judgment for that amount was'accordingly rendered. Prom this judgment the defendant has appealed.

The jury was warranted in assuming from the evidence that the defendant seized and retained the plaintiff’s farm machinery unlawfully, arbitrarily, oppressively and maliciously. It was necessary for the plaintiff to establish the existence of. malice in fact, on the part of the defendant, to sustain a judgment for exemplary damages for seizing and retaining the farm machinery. (8 Cal. Jur. 865, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 379, 124 Cal. App. 646, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prentice-v-zumwalt-calctapp-1932.