120 Cal. 502 | Cal. | 1898
After due consideration of this cause in Bank we are satisfied with the conclusion reached in Department; and for the reasons given in the opinion delivered in Department, the judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
Henshaw, J., Harrison, J., Yan Fleet, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
The following is the opinion rendered in Department Two, January 7, 1897:
McFARLAND, J.—On the fourteenth day of June, 1884, the plaintiff made a conveyance by deed of the land described in the complaint to H. K. Owens. The consideration of said conveyance was fifty-five thousand two hundred and forty shares of the capital stock of a certain corporation called the Pacific Coast Steel & Iron Manufacturing Company. The certificates of said shares were in the name of the said Owens, and he delivered them to the plaintiff, who had new certificates issued to herself for said shares. Shortly after the conveyance of said land to said Owens he conveyed the same by deed to his wife, Helen M. Owens. This action was commenced against the said H. K. Owens and his wife,
It is contended by appellants that the finding of the court of fraudulent misrepresentation as to said stock is not supported by the evidence, and also that the court committed a great many errors in the admission and exclusion of evidence against their objections, and to which ruling due exceptions were taken; but it is not necessary for us to inquire into and determine these questions, because in our opinion the judgment must be reversed upon, another ground.
There is no averment in the complaint that before the commencement of the action the plaintiff restored or offered to restore to defendants the said stock; nor is there any averment that plaintiff was unable to restore said stock, or any excuse given why she did not restore the same, or offer to do so. Indeed, there is-no averment that she gave any notice to defendants that she rescinded the said contract. Neither is there any clear averment that said stock was of no value; and the court found that it was of value, not exceeding two thousand dollars. All that appears-upon the subject of restoration of said stock, or an offer to restore1 the same, is as follows: In the second amended complaint, upon-which the case was tried, it is averred that in the original complaint an offer was made to deliver the certificates of stock to the-said H. K. Owens, who was then living, and the court found that such offer was made in the original complaint, and that the certificates were deposited with the clerk of the court, "not already indorsed, but to be hereafter properly indorsed under order of court,” and that since the death of said Owens plaintiff "has
It is undoubtedly the general rule that there can be no rescission of an executed contract, upon the ground of fraudulent misrepresentation, without restoration before suit by the party seeking to rescind of everything of value which he had received from the other party under the contract, or a bona fide offer to restore. This rule is expressly declared in the Civil Code, and has always-been rigidly enforced in this state from a very early date in our judicial history. In Gifford v. Carvill, 29 Cal. 589, the suit was upon certain promissory notes given for the purchase money of certain shares of stock in a mining corporation, and the defense was that the defendant was induced to make the purchase by the false and fraudulent representations of the plaintiff as to the value of the mine owned by said corporation. Judgment was
Counsel for respondent in his very able briefs endeavors to avoid the applicability of the rule above stated to the case at bar, by contending that there is a distinction between an action upon .a rescission and a bill in equity to rescind, and that the case at bar is of the latter class. Ho doubt such a distinction is to be found in some of the authorities—although no case decided by .this court recognizing the distinction has been called to our attention. But in such a case the purpose of the action, no matter what it may be called, is always to effect the rescission of a ■contract and put the parties, as nearly as may be, in statu quo. Strictly speaking, a contract can be rescinded only by one or both •of the parties to it; but when one of the parties, having the right to do so, has rescinded in the way prescribed by the law, and the other denies the right or the fact, the former is usually forced to ■invoke in some way the aid of a court to secure the fruits and benefits of the rescission. It is evident, however, that he cannot in a plain case escape the consequences of a failure to himself take the proper steps to rescind by simply casting his complaint in the mold of a bill in equity to rescind. There are exceptional ■cases where restoration or an offer to restore before suit brought -is not necessary—as, for instance, where the thing received by
But, under any view, the judgment here under consideration -cannot stand. In the first place, the case at bar is as clearly within the rule requiring restoration before suit as any case that •could be well imagined. To give notice of the rescission and restore the stock within reasonable time after discovery of the .alleged fraud was a plain duty of easy performance. There is no excuse for not doing so averred in the complaint, and no valid •excuse shown by the evidence. Moreover, there was no valid offer to restore the stock after suit brought; it was not placed in a position and condition to be taken by appellants. Placing the ■certificates issued to respondent in the hands of the clerk, without ■assignment, was of no avail. They were not assigned until immediately before the judgment, ten years after the contract, and nine years after the commencement of the action; and then there was no assignment of the shares of stock, for respondent did not then own any stock, and the certificates assigned were mere worthless paper. Therefore, the judgment cannot be maintained even upon respondent’s theory of the nature of the action; for the con•duct of respondent has made it impossible for the court to decree a rescission that would do equity between the parties. The de
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
Henshaw, J., and Temple, J., concurred.