63 P. 692 | Cal. | 1901
The plaintiff recovered judgment in the court below for the sum of thirteen thousand three hundred and ten dollars, with interest and attorney's fee, alleged to be due on seven promissory notes made to the plaintiff by the defendants. The complaint is in the ordinary form. The defense was fraud in the procurement of the contract. The questions involved relate exclusively to the sufficiency of the findings.
The answer of the defendant Pott, besides denying that the notes were given for valuable consideration, and alleging that they were wholly without consideration, "avers: 1. That each of said notes was given for a part of the purchase price of certain shares of the Western Granite and Marble Company, a corporation; 2. All of which shares were then, and have ever since continued to be, and now are, entirely worthless and valueless; . . . . 3. That each of said notes was procured by and through the false and fraudulent representations of *381 the plaintiff, to wit, that said stock was of the value of fifty dollars per share or more, and that a dividend of ten per cent on that valuation had already been earned, and would be paid on or about May 1, 1893, all of which the plaintiff knew to be false, and without any foundation in fact; that no dividend has ever been paid on said stock since the making of said notes."
The answer of the defendant Austin is to the same effect; but the fraud is alleged in more detail, and additional circumstances are mentioned, as, e.g., that the plaintiff controlled the officers of the corporation, and caused them to make false and misleading statements and reports, etc. It will be sufficient, however, to consider only so much of his answer as corresponds to that of his codefendant.
The findings of the court, so far as material, are that the notes sued upon were made in pursuance of a written contract of even date, by the terms of which the plaintiff agreed to sell, and thereby did sell, certain office furniture and other property, specifically described, used in the plaintiff's business "of brokerage, insurance and real estate," together with the business, "and also six hundred and fifty shares of the capital stock of the Western Granite and Marble Company, for the sum of forty-five thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars, to be paid ten thousand dollars in cash, twenty-five thousand dollars by the joint notes of defendants, and ten thousand by the several notes of each for five thousand dollars; and that there was not then, nor had there been prior to that time, any confidential relation existing between them, and said Field did not at any time prior to the consummation of said contract or thereafter do or perform any act or thing tending to conceal from the defendants the value or standing of the properties for the purchase of which they were negotiating from him, nor did he in any way prevent, or attempt to prevent, any or either of them from making fair and full investigation on their account into the values of the several properties mentioned, . . . . and that in fact the several properties so sold and transferred did possess an actual value and were not valueless"; and finally, as in fact appeared from the absence of allegations on the point in the answers, "that there had been no rescission or offer to rescind." *382
1. The above findings, it is quite clear, do not respond to the issues as to fraud made by the allegations of the answers, and the case therefore stands without findings as to these issues. Nor, as appears from the opinion of the court inserted in the bill of exceptions, was it designed to find on them. The theory of the court, as there expressed, is that the answers, owing to the failure to allege a rescission or offer to rescind, or to allege damages, eo nomine, could not be regarded as cross-complaints to rescind, or for damages for fraud or deceit; and hence that "the only defense set up to these notes is a want of consideration," or, as elsewhere expressed, "a total failure of consideration." But the facts alleged in the answers show that the defendants were damaged, and also the extent of the damage; and upon proof of those facts and of the fraud alleged they would have been entitled to recoup against the notes either to the whole amount of the notes if the stock was entirely valueless, or to such less extent as the proofs might justify. The law on this point is well settled. Nor would the case be altered even had it been found that the stock given as the consideration of the notes had some value. This would affect only the extent of the relief.
"There are three methods by which, in cases like the present, a party defrauded may obtain relief: 1. Cancellation or rescission, etc.; . . . . 2. Affirmative relief by an action to recover compensation for the injury sustained by the fraud of the defendant, where no cancellation is necessary as . . . . the basis of such recovery; 3. Defensive relief, whereby the fraud is set up by way of defense to defeat an action brought to enforce an apparent obligation or liability." (Toby v. Oregon etc. R.R.Co.,
2. The findings also fail to respond to the allegations of the answers as to the consideration. The allegations are: 1. That the consideration of the notes was the stock; 2. That this was entirely without value. On these points the court simply finds the terms of the contract, and that "the several porperties so sold and transferred by the said Field did possess an actual value, and were not valueless." But this refers, not specifically to the stock, which according to the allegations of the answer constituted exclusively the consideration of the notes, but generally to all the property sold, and would be equally true whether the stock be or be not of any value.
It is true that in the written contract an aggregate sum is mentioned as the consideration for the transfer of the property generally, and that, as the court says, "no valuation was thereby placed upon any of the items composing the consideration"; and consequently that prima facie the contract was entire. But it was competent for the defendant to show by parol testimony what the consideration in fact was; that is to say, that the consideration of the notes was the stock, and the consideration for the other property the ten thousand dollars paid in cash. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1962, subd. 2; Civ. Code, secs.
We advise that the judgment and order be reversed.
Gray, C., and Chipman, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order are reversed.
Temple, J., McFarland, J., Henshaw, J.