Thompson v. Modern School of Business & Correspondence

190 P. 451, 183 Cal. 112, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 379
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 5299.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 190 P. 451 (Thompson v. Modern School of Business & Correspondence) 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
Thompson v. Modern School of Business & Correspondence, 190 P. 451, 183 Cal. 112, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 379 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

This is an appeal a judgment favor of the plaintiffs, William L. Thompson, and his wife, Laura P. Thompson, in an action for damages based on fraud; for actual damages to plaintiff William L. Thompson in the sum of $235, for “community damage” in the amount of two thousand five hundred dollars, and for exemplary damages in the same sum for him and his wife. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered judgment for actual damages to William L. Thompson in the amount of $230 and for joint damages in the sum of $460.

The defendant, the Modern School of Business and Correspondence, is a corporation organized under the laws of this state and claiming to have its principal place of business in San Francisco. This is the way the organization was held out to the public: It was represented in an “annual catalogue” that headquarters were maintained in a pretentious building in San Francisco, where there was a “faculty,” composed of thirteen “heads of departments.” Besides *114 this “faculty” there was a “superintendent of organizers,” whose business, it appears, was to induce others to enter the school’s employ as “field organizers.” These “field organizers” were designated to solicit persons to become “students” in the school and to purchase “courses of instruction,” the instruction to be given through the United States mails. It seems that, according to the scheme, the purchaser of a “course of instruction” could pay in cash or in monthly installments, and was entitled to receive from the school “syllabi, summaries, suggestive outlines, and helps in study,” and upon the successful completion of the course there would"be conferred upon the “student” “a handsome diploma.” It was also represented in the catalogue that there was a “regular employment department to assist graduates of the school in securing desirable positions.” The prices charged for the “courses of instruction” did" not appear in the catalogue.

Thompson, having read in San Diego a newspaper advertisement of the school, addressed a letter to the headquarters, asking for information. The school replied under date of June 3, 1915, that if Thompson were selected he would be engaged “on a guaranteed salary, based on education and previous business experience.” Thompson filled out and forwarded the application blank which had been sent to him. In a letter dated June 8tb the school informed Thompson that its “superintendent of organizers,” Mr. Joseph H. Hill, would call on him in San Diego, and stating, “We are authorizing him to engage you on a guaranteed salary of $900 for the first year.” In the interview that followed between Hill and Thompson on June 20th in "San Diego, Hill told Thompson that he would be required to make a deposit of $10, which was, according to the latter’s testimony, “returnable on the first sale”; Thompson further stated that Hill told him that this deposit was “to cover the possible chance that I might not enter on the duties after he had spent his time educating me.” Thompson was also required to furnish security—or, as Hill put it, a “credit blank” or “bonds”—for the faithful accounting of any collections from “students” which he might make on behalf of 'the school. Thompson paid the $10 deposit and “gave the name of my wife, Laura P. Thompson, as my security.” Hill outlined to Thompson the *115 duties of a “field organizer.” On June 21st Thompson entered into a written contract of employment with the school, through Hill, under the terms of which Thompson agreed to devote his entire time to the work of “field organizer” for a period of one year. The contract was admitted in evidence and the provision for compensation was as follows: “11th. If after this contract has been completed by the said party of the first part [Thompson] it be found that his profits on enrollments secured during the period of this contract, as shown by his own daily reports sent to said school have not amounted to nine hundred dollars ($900.00) then said second party [School] agrees to make up in cash such deficiency.” On the same day Mrs. Thompson executed and delivered the “credit blank” or “bond” binding herself to pay to the school at San Francisco such amount as should be stipulated and agreed to be paid by her husband “for goods, supplies, stationery, scholarships, and certificates of membership as he may have ordered, or may hereafter order from time to time, not exceeding $250.00 in any one shipment.” Thompson explained that he had his wife do this upon the representation of Hill that “it is simply a guaranty that if you collect monies for the company and you fail to return them that Mrs. Thompson, or whoever signs this letter of credit, will make restitution.” Thompson further testified that on the same date Hill presented to him an “order blank” to be used in ordering courses from the school and “at the time that he produced this ... he brought up and mentioned the samples, . . . and he then produced this blank with two courses, the Commercial Scholarship and the Civil Service Scholarship, on it. I had, of course, been studying for several days prior to this under Mr. Hill . . . and I had become very much pleased with their automobile engineering course, . . . and I told Mr. Hill that I thought I ought to have a sample of that course as well, . . . and so he said, ‘All right, we will include that.’ And that auto engineering course was then added. After that ... he handed this order over to me, and I also signed this.” According to Thompson, Hill also told him that these scholarships were “to be used for demonstrating the course, ...” On cross-examination he testified further as to this conversation with Hill: “I said, ‘. . . these scholarships are to be paid for, *116 whether sold or not,’ and he said ‘No, that is referring to the matter of collecting the money. ’ ”

It is alleged in the complaint, and evidence was admitted in support of the allegation that the “order blank” was changed after Thompson had signed and delivered it to Hill. As introduced in evidence there appear thereon opposite the designations ‘ ‘ Commercial Scholarships, ” “ Civil Service Scholarships,” and “Auto Eng. Scholarships,” the amounts ‘ ‘$27.00, ” “ $23.00, ’ ’ and ‘‘ $31.00, ’ ’ respectively; the sum “$81.00” appears as the total “amount”; opposite the words “Total amount which I am to pay for above order” is the sum “$81”; opposite the words “Total credits due me” the sum $10.00” (being apparently the deposit made by Thompson); and opposite the words “Balance to be charged to my account” the amount “$71.00.” Thompson’s testimony in respect to this instrument was “there were no figures on the paper at the time I signed it.”

Hill did not appear at the trial, but in his deposition he testified that the “order blank” was entirely filled out, including the figures for the prices of supplies ordered, before Thompson signed it; that he never told Thompson or gave him to understand that the scholarships were for demonstrating, or were not to be paid for; that “the prices inserted in the order blank were written therein with the full knowledge and consent of the said W. L. Thompson”; and that he made no change or alteration in the figures or prices in the “order blank” after Thompson had signed it.

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Bluebook (online)
190 P. 451, 183 Cal. 112, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-modern-school-of-business-correspondence-cal-1920.