Spicer v. Hurley

118 P. 249, 161 Cal. 1, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 387
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1911
DocketL.A. No. 2577.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 118 P. 249 (Spicer v. Hurley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spicer v. Hurley, 118 P. 249, 161 Cal. 1, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 387 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

The complaint in this action sets forth four different causes of action the first of which was abandoned on the trial and no further reference need be made to it.

The facts stated in the complaint, applicable generally to the other three causes of action were, that plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement whereby defendant for the sum of fifteen thousand dollars cash to be paid him by plaintiff was to convey to him certain interests in two patents claimed by defendant to have been granted to him by the United States government, one being for “The • Hurley Adjustable Reversible Raehet Wrench,” the other for the “Hurley Meat Tenderer Machine,” and. that the fifteen thousand dollars cash was to be paid principally as the consideration for the improved wrench; that on November 17, 1908, pursuant to said agreement, plaintiff paid to defendant fifteen thousand dollars in cash and in consideration therefor defendant executed to plaintiff two bills of sale, one purporting to convey to plaintiff “an undivided one-sixteenth interest in and to the patent right to ‘The Hurley Adjustable Reversible Raehet Wrench’ No. 411,530, granted by the United States government under the laws relating to patents,” the other purporting to convey an undivided interest in the “Hurley Meat Tenderer Machine”; that on November 24, 1908, plaintiff discovered that no patent at all had been granted defendant for any wrench and that plaintiff had acquired nothing under said bill of sale respecting the same; that there was at the time of the execution of said bill of sale no patent in existence upon “The Hurley Adjustable Reversible Raehet Wrench” and that no patent had at that time been granted by the United States government under the patent laws for such a wrench. In addition to these allegations, common to all the causes of action, the second cause of action charged a total failure of consideration; the third a partial failure of consideration in a material respect (Civ. Code, sec. 1689); the fourth *3 charged fraud and deceit. It was further alleged that a prompt rescission of said agreement to purchase and a tender back of all that plaintiff had received from defendant was made by him on November 24, 1908. These allegations as to rescission were denied on information and belief. This was an entirely insufficient denial and these allegations therefore stood admitted.

A' trial was had on the second, third, and fourth causes of action. No question was made as to the payment of the consideration by plaintiff for the execution of the bill of sale.

The court found the following facts:

II.
“That plaintiff was induced to pay said consideration to defendant by the representations thereby and theretofore made to plaintiff by defendant for the purpose of inducing said plaintiff .to pay said consideration and enter into said agreement to and with defendant; which representations were, as follows: ‘that Letters Patent of the United States, Numbered 411.530 had been duly allowed and granted to him (said defendant) by the United States government on a certain article, to wit: the ‘Hurley Adjustable Reversible Raehet Wrench’; ‘that said patent had been duly allowed and granted’; ‘that he (said defendant) was the true and lawful owner of a one sixteenth (1-16) in the entire United States patent right thereto’; ‘that he (said-defendant) could sell, transfer and assign the said one-sixteenth (1-16) interest to plaintiff, and that he could vest the full title to said one-sixteenth (1-16) interest in said patent rights in plaintiff.”
III.
“That said representations made by the defendant as aforesaid were .not true and that defendant knew them to be untrue; that the letters patent of the United States, numbered 411,-530, were not granted to defendant and defendant never, at any time, had any interest therein; that said patent No. 411.530 was not granted for an article known as the ‘Hurley Wrench’ or for any wrench, or any improvements on any wrench, whatever, but was granted to one William H. Pyott on September 24, 1889, for an ‘Improvement in Automatic Stop Mechanism for Steam Engines,’ and said patent was expired at and before the said November 17, 1908; that no patent of the United States, at or before the making of said *4 representations by defendant, or before the commencement of this action, or the filing of defendant’s answer herein, had ever been granted or issued, for said article known as the Hurley wrench, or for any invention of or improvements made by defendant in wrenches, and said defendant was not, at said times, the owner of any patent rights in said wrench whatever.”

It was further found that the bill of sale purporting to convey to plaintiff an interest in a patent for the “Hurley Adjustable Reversible Ratchet Wrench” did not vest in plaintiff a full or any interest in said or any patent, or any patent rights, whatever, and by said instrument did not sell, assign, or transfer to plaintiff anything of value whatever-; that the consideration for which plaintiff had paid the fifteen thousand dollars had failed, and that plaintiff had promptly rescinded the contract and demanded the repayment of his money.

The conclusion of law was that plaintiff was entitled to recover the entire consideration of fifteen thousand dollars paid to the defendant and judgment was entered accordingly. Defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

Appellant attacks finding II on the ground that there was no evidence that he ever stated to plaintiff that letters patent of the United States government had been issued to defendant for the wrench. But this claim of appellant is absolutely without merit because the recitals in the finding respecting this matter consist of declarations in the answer of defendant where he directly averred that he had made all the representations which are contained in the finding, among others, alleging “that the defendant represented to plaintiff that letters patent of- the United States numbered 411,530, had been duly allowed and granted to him by the United States government on a certain article known as the Hurley wrench.”

Appellant also challenges finding III as not being supported by the evidence because (to state it as it is contained in the specifications) the execution of the bill of sale would vest in plaintiff all the rights purporting to be conveyed by defendant and did transfer everything it purported to convey. But the evidence clearly shows that defendant did not by it convey to or vest in plaintiff any right which it purported to do. It purported to vest him with an interest in a patent right for *5 the Hurley wrench which had been granted to defendant, but the evidence clearly shows that no such patent had been granted to him. The attack which appellant directs against this finding is based on what he claims was the uncontradicted evidence in the case. Upon the trial defendant introduced evidence by which he sought to prove that in his negotiations with the plaintiff for a sale of the patent for his improved wrench he had explained fully to him that he had not been actually granted a patent for the wrench, but only that his application therefor had been allowed

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 P. 249, 161 Cal. 1, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spicer-v-hurley-cal-1911.