Rubin v. Platt Music Co.

268 P. 396, 92 Cal. App. 203, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 777
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 1928
DocketDocket No. 5378.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 268 P. 396 (Rubin v. Platt Music 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
Rubin v. Platt Music Co., 268 P. 396, 92 Cal. App. 203, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 777 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

STEPHENS, J., pro tem.

This case arose out of a contract to purchase a piano. The action was tried by the court *205 without a jury and judgment went for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

The facts present little conflict. The plaintiff, respondent here, after seeing an advertisement of defendant announcing “Platt’s 19th Anniversary Sale,” went to the latter’s branch store and engaged in conversation one B. Goodman, manager of the branch, relative to the purchase of a piano. An agreement was arrived at, whereupon cash in the sum of $150 was paid over and an instrument on a blank piece of paper was written by Goodman and handed' to respondent. The instrument read as follows:

“October 16, 1924.
“Mrs. H. Rubin,
“2756 Fairmont St.,
“Los Angeles, Calif.
“Acknowledge receipt of a check amount One hundred fifty dollars as initial payment on piano, small grand, Emerson; new, purchased from me.
“Balance of payment should be upon delivery of the instrument, One hundred dollars cash and two lots which are located in Sunny Slope Acres near Alhambra, Calif., on Ivan St. #46 Dimension of lots 100 x 19 on which you owe 937.50 payable monthly payment of 12.50 month on which I will assume payment if legally correct.
“B. Goodman.”

Respondent and his wife held a contract to buy the real property described in the above instrument, and shortly after the writing passed both assigned their rights in such contract and delivered the instrument to Goodman. There is evidence to the effect that this assignment was in blank. The money paid was not turned in to the appellant corporation, and the blank for the name of the assignee of the lot contract was filled in with the name “B. Goodman” after the delivery of the contract. The piano was never delivered, although another was sent to respondent’s house and left there for a time, when someone took it away. On numerous occasions over a period of several months respondent called at the branch store about getting the piano for which he bargained, but was only put off by Goodman with some story calculated to excuse the default.

At the trial plaintiff offered testimony which strongly supported the idea that he at all times assumed he was *206 dealing with Platt Music Company, and that he paid his money and assigned his lot contract rights to that company for the piano mentioned in the written instrument. To all of this defendant objected on the ground that it tended to vary the terms of a written contract. The instrument on its face does not appear to be more than a receipt, and the evidence adduced seems to compel the conclusion that the contract was oral. However that may be, the complaint alleges the instrument to be a written contract and the answer admits it to be such. The receipt recites the terms of the agreement, and under the circumstances we are bound to treat it as a contract.

Appellant cites the case of Bloom v. Coates, 190 Cal. 458 [213 Pac. 260], and argues that that ease supports two points of law, viz.: “ (1) That an undisclosed principal may sue or be sued, but not a disclosed principal, especially when he is present at the making of the contract; and (2) where a writing purports to be solely the agreement of the agent, and does not purport to bind the principal, or to be made in his behalf, and was not executed by him, he would not be liable.” In the proper consideration of the problems presented it will be useful to analyze a number of California cases.

Curran v. Holland, 141 Cal. 437 [75 Pac. 46], This action was based on a written agreement to recover a real estate loan commission.' The agreement was signed by an agent of a principal undisclosed in the negotiations and in the written agreement except that the latter signed as a witness. The action was against the principal, and oral evidence was received tending to prove that the witness to the agreement was the real principal. It is stated in the opinion that “ . . . the evidence was clearly admissible.” We quote further from the same case:

“It is said in Reinhard on Agency (see. 223) : ‘While extrinsic evidence, except in the instances heretofore pointed out, will not generally be received to vary or contradict the contents of a written instrument, such evidence is always admissible to charge with liability an undisclosed principal, or one who though disclosed is not named in the instrument.’ [Italics in the text.] (See, also, Reinhard on Agency, secs. 303, 308, and cases cited; Story on Agency, sec. 466a.) The supreme court of the United States, in Ford v. Williams, *207 21 How. 289 [16 L. Ed. 36], said: ‘The contract of the agent is the contract of the principal, and he may sue or be sued thereon, though not named therein; and notwithstanding the rule of law that an agreement in writing may not be contradicted or varied by parol, it is well settled that the principal may show that the agent who made the contract in his own name was acting for him. This proof does not contradict the writing: it only explains the transaction. ’ ’

Other authorities are there cited to the same intent. It does not appear that the particular point italicized in the foregoing quotation, and which is the exact point in the instant ease, was before the court, but it is pertinent as an expression from a foremost text-writer and follows as logically from the reason presented as does the precise point decided. The case Estrella Vineyard Co. v. Butler, 125 Cal. 232, 237, 238 [57 Pac. 980], is to the same effect.

In Ferguson v. McBean, 91 Cal. 63 [14 L. R. A. 65, 27 Pac. 518], Mr. Justice Beatty says: “It is undoubtedly true that when the principal is undisclosed he may sue or be sued, but not when he is known, and especially not when he is present at the making of the contract.” He then proceeds to say that there is much authority both ways as to whether the principal can be sued where he is disclosed, and thinks the sound policy is that he cannot be, as this would violate “the general rule that a writing can not be varied by parol.” As to the invocation of this rule, it may be said in passing that there seems to be no better reason for varying the rule where the principal is unknown or undisclosed than where he is disclosed; further, that it would seem to require oral evidence in most cases to ascertain whether he was disclosed or undisclosed. The reason given in Ford, v. Williams, supra, that it is not a case of varying a written contract, because of the rule of agency that the contract of the agent is the contract of the principal, would appear to be the sound one.

Mr. Justice Shaw, in Geary Street etc. R. R. Co. v. Rolph, 189 Cal. 59 [207 Pac. 539], says:

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Bluebook (online)
268 P. 396, 92 Cal. App. 203, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rubin-v-platt-music-co-calctapp-1928.