125 P. 1079 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1912
The appeal is on the judgment-roll from a judgment against Dennie May Lambert for the sum of $500. A reversal is sought upon the sole ground that the court failed to find upon the issue of payment. The action was brought to recover the reasonable value of legal services performed by plaintiff for appellant at her special instance and request. The court found that the value of the services was $650, but it is the contention of appellant that as to nonpayment the court found simply that $150 had been paid and that there is no finding that the remainder of the sum had not been paid.
It will not be disputed that it was necessary to allege the nonpayment of the claim, and, since it was put in issue by the answer, that it was equally necessary to prove it. (Wise v. Hogan,
The basis for appellant's argument is found in the asserted circumstance that the following are the only findings of fact upon the point: "That said representation of said Dennie May Lambert by said plaintiff and said legal services as attorney and counsellor at law rendered as aforesaid by said plaintiff to said Dennie May Lambert were and are reasonably worth the sum of six hundred fifty dollars ($650). That one hundred fifty dollars ($150) of said last-mentioned sum have been paid." Appellant's claim is that the finding is totally insufficient, in that it does not exclude the inference that the balance of the $650 may have been paid also, while respondent contends that at most an uncertainty is produced, and therefore the judgment should be upheld by reason of the rule that "an uncertain finding on payment must be construed so as to support the judgment rather than to defeat it. *351
(Warren v. Hopkins,
But the truth is that we have here a reasonably clear and unequivocal finding of fact that the $500 had not been paid. It is plain that the court in its decision had in view three questions of fact, viz.: Were the services performed? If so, how much were they reasonably worth and how much had been paid for them? The court found, as we have seen, that the services were performed, that they were reasonably worth the sum of $650 and that $150 had been paid. This last is equivalent to a finding that $500 had not been paid, for the simple reason that it clearly implies that $150 was all that was paid. No one fairly familiar with reputable usage of the English language, unless obsessed by his veneration for ancient forms and ceremonies relating to legal proceedings so as to obscure his understanding of the paramount importance of the practical administration of justice, would fail to reach the conclusion that B still owed A $500 if a court should find that the latter had performed for the former services that were worth the sum of $650 and that "$150 of the last-mentioned sum have been paid." If the action were by A against B for the recovery of horses, and the court should find that B had received six hundred and fifty horses which belonged to A, and that he had returned one hundred and fifty of them, it would be readily understood that the others had not been returned. In truth, our use of the language in *353 every transaction of life is based upon the assumption that such statements as the one here in controversy involve and imply what the logicians call "a universal affirmative." In other words, the affirmation that the defendant paid $150 is equivalent to a statement that $150 is all that he paid. Jevons, in his work on Logic, simply expresses the common understanding when he declares that "Wherever a term is used alone it ought to be interpreted as meaning the whole of its class." It is also true, as he says further, that "the mark of universality usually consists of some adjective of quantity such as all, every, each, any, the whole, but whenever the predicate is clearly intended to apply to the whole of the subject one may treat the proposition as universal." If appellant is right in her contention as to said finding then, of course, respondent would have reason to complain that the court failed to find that his services were not worth more than $650. The point, however, has not been urged that the finding that the services were worth the sum of $650 does not mean that they were worth $650 and no more.
But aside from the foregoing, under the authority ofJessen v. Peterson, Nelson Co.,
It is believed that the contention of appellant is entirely without substantial merit. It is undoubtedly true, as said by the supreme court, in Millard v. Legion of Honor,
The case here measures up to all the just requirements of legal procedure and the judgment is affirmed.
Hart, J., and Chipman, P. J., concurred. *355