Wikstrom v. Yolo Fliers Club

274 P. 959, 206 Cal. 461, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 620
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1929
DocketDocket No. 4093.
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 274 P. 959 (Wikstrom v. Yolo Fliers Club) 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
Wikstrom v. Yolo Fliers Club, 274 P. 959, 206 Cal. 461, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 620 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

Respondents have moved the dismissal of the appeal herein, contending that the action has abated. Appellant died on September 28, 1928, and his executor has been substituted in his stead herein.

The complaint charges the sale by respondent club through the respondent Pratt, its vice-president and agent, to appellant of a tract of land of 152.44 acres in Tolo County. Taking the complaint as true, a portion of the tract of land so purchased lies north of a certain fence and was by all the parties considered worthless. It was to be donated in the deed conveying the portion thereof south of said fence, which last-mentioned portion was bought and sold at a price of $210 per acre. The deed, as written and delivered, called for the said 152.44 acres, for which appellant paid the whole purchase price of $210 per acre. The survey later made showed only 109.2 acres thereof were south of said fence; the balance of 43.24 acres lay north of the fence in the zone overflowed by the waters of Cache Creek, being the land which, according to the complaint, was to be donated with the purchase.

Other allegations of the complaint were that respondent Pratt, who had also been the confidential agent of appellant in other matters, deceived appellant in this behalf respecting said acreage south of said fence, well knowing that he was collecting for respondent club the full price per acre for the worthless area as well as for the area intended to be purchased, and well knowing also that appellant understood that all of the sum paid was to apply to the purchase of land lying south of said fence. The prayer of the complaint was for a return in damages of an amount equivalent to $210 per acre for said 43.24 acres of land, or $9,080.40.

The suit was not commenced until some four years after completion of the transaction, but appropriate allegations tolling the statute are found in the complaint, showing the discovery of the fraud and commencement of this action within the statutory period allowed thereafter for suit. The court found the existence of fraud but held the action was barred by the statute. The propriety of this finding *463 and decision of the court is the chief question on the merits in the appeal.

This statement is ample to show without doubt that the cause of action is assignable; that it survived in this case and passed to the personal representative of appellant. Under the common law of England, including the exceptions, found in the Statute of 4 Edw. III, c. 7, and in the later Statute of 4 Wm. IV, c. 42, and also including later development of it, the rule of assignability seemed to be: “As regards particular results, it is pretty generally held in America that the only causes or rights of action which are not transferable or assignable in any sense are those which are founded upon wrongs of a purely personal nature, such as slander, assault and battery, negligent personal injuries, criminal conversation, seduction, breach of marriage promise, malicious prosecution, and others of like nature. All other demands, claims and rights of action whatever are generally held to be transferable. In conformity with the principle just stated the following demands, claims, and rights of action have been held to be assignable: causes of action arising from the breach of a contract of any kind (except the breach of a promise to marry); causes of action arising from torts which affect the estate rather than the person of the individual who is injured. Under the latter head are claims arising from the carrying away or conversion, of personal property, from the fraudulent misapplication of funds by the officer of a bank, from negligent or intentional injury done to personal property or upon real estate. In view of the general tendency to recognize the transferability of rights of action growing out of injuries done in respect of one’s property or estate, it is somewhat curious to note that it is commonly held that the right of action for fraud and deceit is not assignable. But where property is obtained by deceit or fraudulent device of any sort, the cause of action is assignable, for here the injury is done in respect of the particular property which is wrongfully acquired.” (3 Street’s Foundations of Legal Liability, pp. 86, 87.)

Under this doctrine, without reference to a statute, it has been held that a cause of action ex delicto, for injuries to personal or real property is assignable. (Haynes V. Holliday, 151 Tenn, 115 [268 S, W. 130, 131]; Pome *464 roy’s Remedies and Remedial Rights, see. 147.) Sayre v. Detroit etc. R. Co., 205 Mich. 294, where, at page 314 [171 N. W. 502, 509], the court approves the following language: “The position is that the right of action for a tort is not the subject of assignment; and this we understand to be the general rule (citing cases). But this rule applies only to those torts which are merely personal, and which, on the death of the person wronged, die with him; while torts for taking and converting personal property, or for injury to"one’s estate, and generally, all such rights of action for tort as would survive to the personal representatives, may, it seems, be assigned so as to pass an interest to the assignee which he can enforce by suit at law (citing cases).”

In fact, in California, without reference to the statutory enactments, this court, in Rued v. Cooper, 109 Cal. 682, 693 [34 Pac. 98, 101], approved language as follows, based upon a consideration of the English and American eases then in existence: “Assignability of things in action is now the rule; nonassignability, the exception; and this exception is confined to wrongs done to the person, the reputation, or the feelings of the injured party, and to contracts of a purely personal nature, like promises of marriage.” We have no doubt that under the above general doctrine alone, the cause of action in question must be held assignable and to have survived. (Lazard v. Wheeler, 22 Cal. 139.)

But, supplementing said general doctrine, it must be said that sections 953 and 954 of the Civil Code have lifted many of the restrictions imposed by the rule of the common law upon this subject. There can be little doubt that the cause of action set forth in the complaint here is a “thing in action” under said section 953, and arises “out of the violation of a right of property,” under said section 954, and is expressly made assignable and declared to survive the death of the owner by the latter statute. That these statutes were intended to liberalize the common-law rule was expressly held in Morris v. Standard Oil Co., 200 Cal. 210, 214 [252 Pac. 605]. See, also, to the same effect, Dibble v. San Joaquin L. & P. Corp., 47 Cal. App. 112, 117 [190 Pac. 198], and Stapp v. Madera Canal etc. Co., 34 Cal. App. 41, 47 [166 Pac. 823],

Another statement worthy of note in this behalf is that assignability and survivorship are by the last-men *465 tioned code section, placed upon the same footing. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
274 P. 959, 206 Cal. 461, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wikstrom-v-yolo-fliers-club-cal-1929.