Thomas v. Anthony

157 P. 823, 30 Cal. App. 217, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 56
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1642.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 157 P. 823 (Thomas v. Anthony) 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
Thomas v. Anthony, 157 P. 823, 30 Cal. App. 217, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 56 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This is an action brought to recover from the defendant one thousand dollars deposited with him by the plaintiff in conformity with the terms of a written agreement entered into between them.

When plaintiff’s case was concluded defendant moved for a nonsuit, which was granted, and judgment was rendered and entered thereon. The appeal is from such judgment.

The testimony introduced shows that the plaintiff entered into a contract in writing with the Western Motor Car Company, the trade name under which the defendant Anthony did business. The contract was a lengthy instrument, providing substantially that Thomas should purchase from the defendant fifty Saxon motor cars between the date of the agreement, February 20, 1914, and January 1, 1915. The cars were to be sold to him at “San Francisco list prices,” and a brokerage or discount of forty dollars on each car so sold was allowed to him off of said list price. The defendant reserved the right “to change the list and net prices of these cars at any time by giving the plaintiff at least two weeks’ *219 notice of the proposed change.” The latter agreed to open an establishment for the sale of the cars at Fresno, keep a demonstrator for exhibition purposes, and resell the ears to such customers as he could secure under the conditions named in the contract. He also deposited with the defendant one thousand dollars, which, in ease of cancellation of the contract before its expiration, or in the event that its terms should not be fully complied with by the plaintiff, was to be retained by the defendant as damages, or to be applied by him to the liquidation of accounts that might then be due to him under the contract. The right was reserved by defendant of “canceling the above contract upon fifteen days ’ notice and returning unused deposits.”

At the trial the plaintiff testified as follows: “After the contract was executed and I had paid this thousand dollars I had a conversation with Mr. Sells, the manager of the Western Motor Car Company. That was about March 3d. Mr. Sells told me I had better go down to Fresno and open up an office and take orders for the cars. I asked him how he wanted me to handle the cars. I said, ‘You promised me a demonstrator the first of the month.’ I informed him that under the conditions I could not handle the car on a paying basis, and I asked him if he would release me if I got another job. He said, ‘Most certainly. ’ So I went away and came back next morning, and told him I had another job and asked him for my deposit, and he said, ‘Mr. Thomas, it will have to come from the Los Angeles office, and it will be the end of the week before I can give it to you. ’ And he asked me to come back and get it then. I did come back then and several times later, and he kept putting me off. I ha,d a conversation with Mr. Sells when Mr. Cheney was present. Mr. Cheney asked him how long it would be before I got my money, and he stated the end of the week. Mr. Cheney wanted to know if it would help matters if we paid the expenses of wiring to Los Angeles, and he said, ‘No, it would not,’ and that he would have to write. He said, ‘You know we have a signed contract with Mr. Thomas and can hold him to it if we want to, but we don’t intend" to do it. Without a doubt he will have his money at the end of the week. ’ ’ ’

When the plaintiff rested his ease, besides the contract he had introduced evidence, which, according to his view, entitled him to the return of the one thousand dollars deposit *220 upon the theory that .there had been an oral mutual abandonment or rescission of the written contract. Whether or not that position is sound need not now be determined, but it is certain that there was no evidence before the court from which it could infer that the defendant was actually damaged in the sum of one thousand dollars, or that any of the other contingencies mentioned in the contract had arisen upon which the defendant was entitled to keep the whole deposit.

As before stated, the contract enumerates, in case of a cancellation or breach thereof by the plaintiff, various situations under which the defendant might be entitled to damages, and specifies in each instance of what the damage shall consist. Hence when the plaintiff had concluded his case — and assuming that his evidence showed that he had himself breached the contract, still at that point in the trial he was entitled to the return of the one thousand dollars unless the defendant should show any damage which he was entitled to recoup out of the deposit, or was entitled to the whole deposit, upon the showing made by plaintiff, by virtue of any of the provisions of the contract authorizing the defendant to retain it as liquidated damages.

Under the terms of sections 1670 and 1671 of the Civil Code, a provision in a contract fixing in advance the damage for a breach thereof is void, except when from the nature of the case it would be impracticable or extremely difficult to determine the actual damage.

It is clear that plaintiff’s case disclosed nothing that brought it within the purview of the second of these two sections. Assuming that the plaintiff’s evidence showed a breach of the contract, this alone would not warrant the granting of a nonsuit and the denial of all relief. In order to entitle a defendant to retain a sum deposited with him as contingent liquidated damages for the breach of an obligation, it is incumbent upon him to show not only by averment, but also by proof, that his case is within the exception contained in section 1671; for without an allegation bringing his ease within the exception the pleading in that regard is insufficient, the presumption being, in the absence of such allegation, that such agreement is void. (Long Beach etc. Dist. v. Dodge, 135 Cal. 401, 405, [67 Pac. 499]; Patent Brick Co. v. Moore, 75 Cal. 205, [16 Pac. 890]; Pacific Factor Co. v. Adler, 90 Cal. 110, 120, [25 Am. St. Rep. 102, 27 Pac. 36].) “If a suit be brought *221 on the contract for the actual and not the liquidated damages, as a matter of defense defendant must show to the court that it is erroneously instituted. It must be shown to the court by proper pleadings and competent proof that the contract falls within” the law permitting liquidated damages. “This does not depend entirely upon the contract itself. Facts must be pleaded and proven from which the court can say as a matter of law that the contract for liquidated damages is valid because ‘from the nature of the case it would be impracticable or extremely difficult to fix the actual damages. ’ The mere stipulations of the contract are insufficient for that purpose. ’ ’ (Deuninck v. West Gallatin Irr. Co., 28 Mont. 261, [72 Pac. 618].)

While the judgment must be reversed for the error of the court in granting the defendant’s motion for nonsuit, it is proper to notice several other contentions of the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
157 P. 823, 30 Cal. App. 217, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-anthony-calctapp-1916.