77 Cal. 267 | Cal. | 1888
Action for damages for the conversion of certain mining stock and diamonds. This property was pledged to secure the payment of money advanced by defendant at the request of plaintiff. Payment not having been made, the pledgee caused the property to be sold to satisfy the debt. The grounds of objection to the sale are, that although notice of the sale was given to the pledgor, none was given to the public, and that the pledgee himself was the purchaser at the sale. The defense was, that the want of notice to the public was at the pledgor’s request, and to save him from expense, and that lie did not elect to avoid the sale within a reasonable time, but upon being informed of the facts, ratified
1. It is claimed that the court erred in giving the following instruction: “If the jury find from the evidence that prior to June 13,1878, Hill agreed with Finigan that the sale should he made without other or further notice to the public, or to him, than such as Hill already had, and that Finigan thereupon caused the sale to be made, and became a purchaser thereat, and that after-wards Hill, upon being informed of the fact that Finigan had purchased the property at such sale, did not, within a reasonable time, object to such purchase by Finigan, then you will find that Hill ratified the sale, and it thereby became valid and binding, and your verdict will be for the defendant.” The argument against this instruction is, in the first place, that ratification is a fact, and that therefore it was improper for the court to tell the jury that they should infer it from other facts; and in the second place, that such other facts were not sufficient to support the inference which the court undertook to draw. But we think the instruction was proper. The substance of it was, that if the jury believed that there was unreasonable delay they must find a verdict for the defendant. This included everything that was necessary for them to know in this regard. It was not necessary to tell them why this was so, and if there was |any inaccuracy in stating the grounds of the rule laid down for their guidance, it was manifestly harmless. It is therefore immaterial to consider whether it is strictly accurate to say that unreasonable delay would amount to a ratification. We are inclined to think that in strictness a ratification implies some affirmative action, and that, if any reason were to be given to the jury for the explicit and positive directions embodied in the instruction, it would have been better to have said that the pledgor had a right of election to treat the sale as
2. It is contended that the court erred in giving the following instruction: “If you find, from the evidence, that the defendant caused the property pledged to him to be offered for sale at public auction, but without notice, and if at such sale the property was bid in by the defendant for fair market prices, and that higher prices were not obtainable at the time and place of sale, and if you further find that the plaintiff, upon being informed of such sale, made no objection thereto, but commenced to treat with the defendant for the purchase from defendant of a portion of the property, you will find that the plaintiff ratified the sale, and your verdict will be for the defendant.” The argument against this instruction is similar to that against the preceding one, viz., that ratification is a fact, and that, therefore, it is improper to tell the jury that they should infer it from other facts; and that, if this were not so, the facts stated in the instruction were not sufficient to support the conclusion which the court directed the jury to draw, for the reason that the element of the pledgor’s knowledge of the law was omitted. But we think the instruction was proper. It is perfectly true that our laws do not permit the judge to instruct the jury as to what inference of fact they are to draw. But whether or not a particular conception is of a “fact” or a “conclusion of law,” is generally a matter of relation. In one connection a word or phrase may stand for a fact, while in another the same word or phrase may designate a conclusion of law. {Levins v. Rovegno, 71 Cal. 273; Turner v. White, 73 Cal. 300.) And although a finding that a party “ratified” a given transaction might in some cases be sufficient as a finding of fact, yet in the present instance all that we understand the instruction to mean, and all that the jury could have understood from it, is, that if they believed that the plaintiff did certain things, those things-
The question then is, whether the facts enumerated in the instruction were sufficient, as a manifestation of the pledgor’s election, to treat the sale as valid; and we think that they were. It is to be observed that the instruction does not put a case of mere silence on the part of the pledgor. It is possible that mere silence (irrespective of lapse of time) would not amount to an election or ratification. But here there was something more than silence. The instruction requires, not only that there should be a failure to object, but also that he should have commenced to treat with the defendant for a portion of the property. If he did this with knowledge of his rights, we think it was sufficient. It was not necessary that the ratification should have a consideration or the elements necessary to make a new contract. (Hill v. Finigan, 62 Cal. 439.) In Child v. Hugg, 41 Cal. 520, the pledgor, on being presented with an account of the sale, admitted its correctness, and “approved ” of the sale, and promised to pay the balance
It remains to be considered whether the pledgor’s knowledge of the law^should have been enumerated as one of the elements of the ratification. There certainly are decisions which hold that knowledge of the law is essential to a ratification. (See King v. Lagrange, 50 Cal. 332; Cockerell v. Cholmeley, 1 Buss. & M. 425.) And for the purposes of this case we shall assume, without deciding, that knowledge of the law was necessary. But there is nothing in the record to show that the pledgor did not know the law, and the presumption is, that he did know it. Now, if the pledgor had expressly admitted at the trial that he did know the law at the time he commenced to treat for the purchase of the diamonds, it would seem to be clear that he would not have been injured by the failure to enumerate that element in the instruction; and we think that the unrebutted presumption has, for this purpose, the same force as an admission.
3. It is urged that the court erred in giving the fol
(a) It is said that they ignore the pledgor’s right of election; that while it is true that the pledgor could have elected to treat the illegal sale as a conversion, yet that he did not do so, but elected te place the conversion at the time of the formal demand and refusal on the 7th of August. There are authorities which say that in case of a sale like the one involved here, where the pledgee is the purchaser, there is no conversion, unless the pledgor elects to treat it as such (see Bryan v. Baldwin, 52 1ST. Y. 235; Jones on Pledges, sec. 571), and for the purposes of this decision, we shall assume that such is the law. But if the pledgor’s story is to be believed, he did elect to treat the sale as invalid at the time mentioned in the instruction. He says that a day or so after the sale the pledgee gave him a statement of account, and that he then “ told him I did not recognize that sale, and that he had no right to sell my stocks and diamonds, and that I did not approve of it,” and that he refused to buy back the diamonds; and said: “I will make you give up those diamonds yet.” This seems to us a complete disaffirmance of the sale; and it is so char
(b) It is said that the judge improperly assumed a fact when he charged that “if the jury find from the evidence that, on the day when plaintiff was served with the account of sale by the defendant, Finigan assumed,” etc. The argument is, that this assumes that the plaintiff “was served with the account of sale by the defendant.” But the plaintiff admits that he was served by the defendant with a statement of account. This fact is undisputed, and hence the appellant was not injured by its assumption. His counsel, who certainly has argued the case with zeal and ability, says that the instruction does not refer to the account above mentioned, but to another account which the defendant says he delivered to the plaintiff, but which the «plaintiff denies that he received. We are by no means certain that this is the case, or that the jury so understood it. But assuming that the instruction refers to the latter account, there was nevertheless no injury, for the two accounts are, for all pui’poses which are material to the question in hand, substantially the same. The account which the plaintiff admits that he received from the defendant was received by him about the same time as the other; and it informed him (though in a more- condensed mode), that the securities had been sold, the date of the sale, and the price they brought. This, with what he admits that the defendant told him at the time, was all that it was material for him to know. The foregoing disposes also of
4. It is argued that there was error in instructing the jury that the presumption as to the measure of damages established by section 3336 of the Civil Code is a disputable presumption. ' We do not find it necessary to determine this question. There was no evidence tending to rebut the presumption (unless the evidence going to defeat the plaintiff’s claim altogether be considered such, in which view there was of course no injury), and no question relating to it was submitted to the jury. The instruction, therefore, was purely abstract; and in view of all the circumstances of the case, we do not see how it could have misled the jury. The assignments as to the admissibility of evidence were not pressed at the oral argument, and we do not think they require special notice.
Upon the whole record, we see no prejudicial error, and the order appealed from is therefore affirmed.