65 Cal. 179 | Cal. | 1884
1. Appellant claims that the court below had no power to set aside the verdict of the jury, and to find the facts.
The substituted cross-complaint contains a statement of facts constituting a cause of action in equity. It was a complaint to foreclose a mortgage of personal property given to secure the payment of a promissory note therein set forth. The court was justified in treating the findings of the jury as advisory only.
2. By the verification of the original complaint the plaintiff made its statements his own. As an amended complaint had been substituted for the original, the latter had ceased to perform any office as a pleading, and its averments could not be used to disprove those of the amended complaint. If the adverse party were at liberty to use the first pleading as an admission to overthrow the amended pleading, the party who amends would reap no benefit from his amendment. (Meacham v. McKay, 37 Cal. 165.) So in Ponee v. McElvey, it was said: “The court below erred in permitting the original complaint to be read in evidence against the plaintiff.” But in the case now before us, the plaintiff was called as a witness on his own behalf, and on cross-examination his attention was called to portions of the original complaint claimed to be inconsistent with his statements as a witness. There is no suggestion that he was not given full opportunity to explain the inconsistencies. The portions of the original complaint were not offered as evidence of any fact other than the fact that the plaintiff made the statements contained in them, and such statements, so far as they were contradictory of or inconsistent with his statements as a witness, were as much admissible, for the purpose of impeaching him, as if they were contained in a letter written by him to a third person, or in an affidavit filed in a distinct proceeding. (Code Civ. Proc. § 2052.)
3. The plaintiff’s witnesses were allowed to testify fully as to the representations and alleged warranty made by defendant at the time of the sale. During the examination of a witness on behalf of the defendant, with reference to the alleged representations claimed by plaintiffs to be false and to constitute a war
The vendor of personal property in his possession warrants his title to the same by implication. And whether such sale be by written bill of sale, or oral, the implied warranty of title may be rebutted by parol, that is to say, the vendor may overcome the legal presumption by proof that he did not warrant the title. (Miller v. Van Tassel, 24 Cal. 459.) In such case the vendor does not add to the terms expressed in the writing, but he only rebuts a legal presumption, not itself expressed in writing, but arising from that which is expressed. But with reference to warranties as to quality, the general rule is that the law does not imply such a warranty. The maxim is caveat empior, and the purchaser has no remedy except in case of express warranty or fraud. Of course fraudulent representations as to the value of a business may be proved, although such representations are not embodied in the written contract of sale, because such evidence of fraud goes to show that the contract never had any operation. And in the case now here the court below allowed the fullest latitude to appellant in the examination of witnesses as to alleged fraudulent representations.
If the contract between the vendor and vendee be reduced to writing, nothing which is not found in the writing (except that which is presumed by law from that which is written) can be considered as a part of the contract. (Kain v. Old, 2 Barn. & C. 627.) When the written sale contains no warranty, or expresses the warranty that is given by the vendor, parol evidence is inadmissible to prove the existence of the warranty in the former case, or to extend it in the latter. (Benj. on Sales, 621.) The apparent exceptions to the rule are where written papers in the nature of informal receipts have been held not to embody, and not to have been intended or designed to set out, the terms and conditions of the contract of bargain and sale; as
Judgment and order affirmed.