Sheppard v. Blitz

163 P.2d 519, 177 Or. 501, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 163
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 163 P.2d 519 (Sheppard v. Blitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheppard v. Blitz, 163 P.2d 519, 177 Or. 501, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 163 (Or. 1945).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

In February, 1938, Chester A. Sheppard instituted a suit in the circuit court for Multnomah county against A. I. Blitz, individually, and A. I. Blitz, trustee, for a decree rescinding and canceling a contract entered into between him and A. I. Blitz, individually and as trustee; canceling an agreement signed by him for the purchase of stock in a corporation to be thereafter organized, and for other relief. The amended complaint, on which the cause was tried, alleged that the plaintiff had been induced by the false and fraudulent representations of A. I. Blitz to enter into the contracts which he sought to have canceled.

Before the suit came on for trial, and on the 20th day of March, 1940, A. I. Blitz died, and thereafter his widow, Enid R. Blitz, executrix of his estate, was sub *503 stituted for him individually as party defendant. No substitution was made for A. I. Blitz, trustee.

At the conclusion of the trial of the case, the circuit court entered a decree in accordance with the prayer of the amended complaint, and from that decree defendant Enid R. Blitz, executrix of the estate of A. I. Blitz, deceased, appealed. This court reversed the decree, on the ground that there was a defect of parties defendant, and remanded the cause for further proceedings not inconsistent with its opinion. Sheppard v. Blitz, 168 Or. 691, 126 P. (2d) 509.

After the entry of the mandate of this court, Sheppard, with the permission of the circuit court, filed a second amended complaint in which he sought to affirm the contracts, which he had previously attempted to have canceled, and to recover from Enid R. Blitz, executrix of the estate of A. I. Blitz, deceased, damages resulting to him from certain alleged false and fraudulent representations of A. I. Blitz, by which he was induced to enter into those contracts. Thereafter, with the permission of the court, plaintiff filed his third amended complaint, wherein the identical alleged false and fraudulent representations of Blitz, on which Sheppard relied in the suit for cancellation of the contracts, are set forth as the basis for his recovery of damages.

In defendant’s answer to the third amended complaint she denied that her decedent had made the false and fraudulent representations charged against him, and in an affirmative defense she set forth the facts relating to the institution of the suit by plaintiff in the circuit court for the cancellation of the contracts hereinbefore referred to, the trial of the suit and the entry of a decree therein canceling and rescinding those contracts, and the reversal of the decree therein by the *504 supreme court. It is then alleged that, by reason of those facts, plaintiff had elected “as his remedy a rescission and disaffirmance of the transactions set forth in plaintiff’s third amended complaint and is barred from proceeding in an action at law for damages arising therefrom, and based upon an affirmance thereof, said remedy being wholly inconsistent with the remedy previously elected by plaintiff.”

The jury, which heard the evidence, returned a verdict for $7500 in favor of the plaintiff. From the judgment entered thereon, defendant has appealed.

Defendant asserts that the institution of the suit by plaintiff for the rescission of the contracts herein-before referred to, with full knowledge of the facts, barred him from thereafter bringing an action for damages. In support of this contention she relies on the following cases: Scott v. Walton, 32 Or. 460, 52 P. 180; Robinson v. Cable, 109 Or. 579, 217 P. 624; Rehfield v. Winters, 62 Or. 299, 125 P. 289; Yokota v. Lindsay, 116 Or. 641, 242 P. 613; Milton v. Hare, 130 Or. 590, 280 P. 511; United States v. Oregon Lumber Company, 260 U. S. 290, 67 L. Ed. 261, 43 S. Ct. 100. She also cites, in addition to those eases, 28 C. J. S., § 6, p. 1070.

Scott v. Walton, supra, was a suit for the cancellation of a deed on the ground of fraud. Belief was denied the plaintiff because of his delay in bringing suit after discovery of the fraud. Mr. Justice Bobert S. Bean, in rendering the decision of the court, laid down the following well-recognized rule of law:

“A party who has been induced to enter into a contract by fraud, has, upon its discovery, an election of remedies. He may either affirm the contract, and sue for damages, or disaffirm it, and be reinstated in the position in which he was before it *505 was consummated. These remedies, however, are not concurrent, but wholly inconsistent. The adoption of one is the exclusion of the other. ’ ’

The foregoing excerpt has been quoted many times with approval by this court and has been applied in numerous instances in suits for rescission. The opinion continues:

“If he desires to rescind, he must act promptly, and return or offer to return what he has received under the contract. He cannot retain the fruits of the contract awaiting future developments to determine whether it will be more profitable for him to affirm or disaffirm it. Any delay on his part, and especially his remaining in possession of the property received by him under the contract, and dealing with it as his own, will be evidence of his intention to abide by the contract.”

What the court was referring to in the last above-quoted excerpt was not a choice of remedies but, in reality, a choice of substantive rights. Schenck v. State Line Telephone Company, 238 N. Y. 308, 144 N. E. 592, 35 A. L. R. 1149.

In Robinson v. Cable, supra, the court held that the decree in a former suit was a final adjudication of all the matters at issue in that suit, “and as the present suit presents no issue not determined in the former suit, the matters alleged in the complaint are merged in the former decree.” In the course of the opinion, the court, after referring to the rule announced in Scott v. Walton, supra, proceeded as follows: “By her former suit she elected to disaffirm the contract and recover back the money she had expended. She now seeks to affirm the contract and sue for damages. The commencement of the former suit, carried, as it was, to a successful termination, was an irrevocable election of remedies upon *506 her part, and precludes her from maintaining her present suit.” (Emphasis supplied).

Rehfield v. Winters, supra, was an action at law for damages based on the false representations of the defendant. It appears that prior to the institution of this action the plaintiff had instituted a suit for the rescission of the contract of sale of the property involved in the action at law, and that during the trial of the equity suit the defendant contended that such remedy was not available to plaintiff. In this contention he was upheld by the trial court, and thereupon plaintiff took a nonsuit.

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Bluebook (online)
163 P.2d 519, 177 Or. 501, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheppard-v-blitz-or-1945.