Dеfendant appeals from a judgment for $5,400 principal and $894.50 interest, which is based upon findings that she obtained the $5,400 from plaintiff by fraud in thе form of a promise made without any existing intention to perform the same.
Defendant tried the case in propria pеrsona. On appeal she requests through present counsel that “in the best interests of justice” this court “extend further latitude to appellant than would ordinarily be the case, in interpretation of the transcript and records of the trial in the lower court. ’ ’ This request misconceives the applicable rule. “A litigant has a right to act as his own attorney
(Gray
v.
Justice’s Court,
Claiming that the finding of fraud is not suppоrted by the evidence counsel engage in an argument as to the preponderance of the evidence, disregarding the rule which has been so often repeated, and as recently as
Primm
v.
Primm,
The answer (drawn by a former attorney), in addition to denials of the principаl allegations of the complaint, alleges by way of separate defense that the $5,400 was received by defendant in two loans, $400 and $5,000, respectively; that they were represented by promissiory notes dated December 15, 1952, and December 27, 1952; thаt “thereafter and on or about the 1st day of March, 1953 this answering defendant first learned that plaintiff was confined to the State Hоspital located at Camarillo, California, as a result of mental illness”; that there was an accord and satisfactiоn on or about June 30,1953, whereby plaintiff agreed to accept in full satisfaction of the debt certain real propеrty in the city of Hanford; that defendant “holds said deed in her possession waiting oral instructions from plaintiff in accordance with the oral agreement between plaintiff and defendant that said deed be delivered to plaintiff upon plaintiffs receiving аnd conveying to defendant written evidence of plaintiffs restoration to legal capacity.” This plea is insufficient beсause it does not allege the essential element of full performance of the terms of the
*292
accord. (Civ. Code, § 1522; 1 Cal.Jur.2d § 34, p. 276;
Silvers
v.
Grossman,
Complaint is made that аppellant was precluded from the introduction of evidence “with relation to the possibility of an accord and satisfaction or novation for the agreement to repay the money she had borrowed from respondent.” It appears, however, that plaintiff was adjudged mentally ill and committed to Camarillo on February 25,1953, paroled on June 30, 1953, and restored to capacity on February 1, 1954. According to defendant’s answer she learned of this commitment about March 1, 1953; her testimony plаced it in May, 1953. The alleged accord agreement is claimed to have been made on or about June 30,1953. Such a contract, made before restoration to capacity, is void. (Civ. Code, § 40;
Hellman Commercial T. & S. Bank
v.
Alden,
Though there is no pleading to that effect counsel nоw argue for a novation. Plaintiff’s testimony, which was accepted by the court, disproved any such claim. Hence the argumеnt must fail of fruition.
Appellant’s real defense was that she had merely borrowed $5,400 from plaintiff in a simple loan transaction rеsulting in two promissory notes, and that she had liquidated them through an accord and satisfaction whose subject matter was the Hanford property. After the evidence was practically closed the trial judge interrogated her. In response to his questiоns she said that she received the $5,400 from plaintiff and delivered the two notes; that they had been extended until sometime in 1954 (the trial began on May 2, 1955); that she had paid no part of principal or interest on either note; that she does not deny owing the monеy and her defense is the alleged agreement concerning the Hanford house,—the void agreement made, if at all, during plaintiff’s adjudged incompetency. On further cross-examination by plaintiff’s counsel *293 it developed that defendant had sold the Hanford house which her answer alleged she was still holding for delivery to plaintiff.
Neither an insufficiency of the evidence nor a prejudicial error appears.
Judgment affirmed.
Moore, P. J., and Fox, J., concurred.
