215 Cal. App. 2d 284 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1963
Plaintiff-appellant, on an assigned promissory note for collection from one Daniel Jay, brought this action on the note signed by defendants-respondents Roeco De Fillipes (hereinafter referred to as Roeco) and Joe De Fillipes for $3,500. It was dated February 4, 1957, and was payable $75 per month, plus 6 per cent interest beginning March 4, 1957. The note provided that if interest was not paid when due the whole sum would become immediately due and payable. Defendants defaulted in the payments due after reducing the principal balance to $3,326.54 as of May 1, 1957. Demand for payment was refused and this action followed. The due execution of the note was duly admitted, as well as the payments thereon and that it was duly assigned to plaintiff. The note was admitted in evidence.
By answer, the only defense pleaded was that in May 1957: “. . . there was a bona fide dispute between the plaintiff and defendants in reference to the amount of money owed by defendants to plaintiff under the alleged promissory note . . . that . . . plaintiff and defendants had an accounting and orally mutually agreed and pursuant to said oral agreement did then and there rescind and cancel said promissory note____”
On the trial of the issue presented, defendant Roeco De Fillipes testified that at the time the note was executed, on February 4, 1957, he talked with Daniel Jay, the payee, in connection with its execution. Objection was then made as to the admissibility-of any statement in reference to such oral conversation between them as an attempt to modify the written terms
“. . . that when we signed the contract and everything, when I first took over the business and he guarantee [sic] me that he would take — that the business was doing $3500.00 a week and that we would try for a couple of months and after a couple of months if the business, regardless of what it was, if it didn’t work out, take the business back. And after a couple of months in May when this all came about that I couldn’t get enough material to supply my route, I asked him one day, I said, ‘Danny, we can’t make it. What say we just dissolve the partnership t ’ ”;
that they agreed to do so and that consequently he left his truck there and Jay unloaded the merchandise from the truck; he said he quit and he heard nothing more from Jay until Jay demanded the money on the note and filed this action on October 20, 1960. The record indicates no arrangement about a partnership between them. Roceo said that Jay orally agreed to supply him with merchandise; that he bought it on credit from Jay and turned over the proceeds to that account, which was delinquent, and that he kept $45 to $50 per week for his own expenses and allowance; that Jay never said he would cancel the note or anything to that effect, but he did say, “We’ll dissolve the business,” and Roceo said he took for granted that that meant to cancel the note. A motion was then made to strike part of this testimony in reference to the oral agreement to purchase his merchandise from Jay, under the same parol evidence rule. It was denied. Defendants rested their case.
Counsel for plaintiff again renewed his motion to strike all the testimony as to any oral agreement pertaining to an alleged guaranty made at the time of the execution of the note, under the parol evidence rule. The ruling was again reserved. Rocco denied disappearing for any length of time, but claimed that he moved to another address in San Bernardino and did not receive any accounting from Jay as to any balance due him. He said he did not thereafter see Jay; He was asked why he did not ask for the return of the note and he said that he was “disillusioned” by the whole thing.
The matter was submitted and the court failed to rule on the motion to strike or the objections made to the admissibility of this evidence and ordered findings in favor of defendants.
The court found the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint to be true and that the affirmative defense stated in the answer was true. Judgment was entered denying recovery to plaintiff in any sum.
“. . . the extrinsic evidence rule and the statutory declaration thereof, is not truly a rule of evidence, but is a rule of substantive law.
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. extrinsic evidence is neither admissible to vary such á contract nor, if admitted without objection, sufficient to support a finding which is in conflict with or in any manner varies the original written contract. The purpose of the extrinsic evidence rule is to prohibit the varying of the writing by extrinsic or parol evidence, while the rule against admission of secondary evidence goes only to the form in which the evidence may be introduced.” (Citing Dollar v. International Banking Corp., 13 Cal.App. 331 [109 P. 499].)
Defendants have not seen fit to file a respondent’s brief, and accordingly the burden of a search for an answer to appellant’s argument and contentions must fall upon this court. The only penalty is that this court may accept as true the statement of facts in the appellant’s opening brief. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 17 (b).)
Since the plaintiff would be entitled to recover on the note in the absence of competent evidence of a legitimate defense to the action, and because of the trial court’s failure to rule on the objection to the testimony and the motion to strike, we probably must assume that the trial court considered the evidence attempted to be stricken and rendered judgment upon it. Otherwise, judgment of necessity would have had to be rendered in favor of plaintiff.
The practice of neglecting to rule on motions to strike, where a proper motion is made immediately before the case is submitted, has been severely criticized as being unfair to counsel and may work a substantial injustice to litigants as well as appellate courts. (Witkin, California Evidence, §§ 718-719, pp. 748-749.) In Alocco v. Fouche, 190 Cal.App.2d 244 [11 Cal.Rptr. 818], it was held that failure of the court to rule formally on evidence received subject to objection is without prejudice if the objections were untenable and the court finds in accordance with the evidence. We must therefore pursue the authorities which might support the judgment.
Civil Code, section 1541, provides: “An obligation is extinguished by a release therefrom given to the debtor by the creditor, upon a new consideration, or in writing, with or without new consideration. ”
Grant v. Aerodraulics Co., 91 Cal.App.2d 68 [204 P.2d 683], is authority for the proposition that termination or abrogation of a written contract may be achieved by an oral agreement, but such agreement is subject to the rules concerning contracts in general and hence must be supported by a sufficient consideration. In Pellissier v. Hunter, 209 Cal.App.2d 306 [25 Cal.Rptr. 779] (hearing denied), this court considered the question of admissibility of a claimed oral agreement made contemporaneously with a written agreement, where its terms were not inconsistent with the terms of the written agreement and related to the same subject matter. There, it was held that for evidence of an oral agreement that is collateral to a written agreement to be admissible, the collateral agreement must have a separate consideration or it must be such as might naturally be made as a separate agreement by the parties so situated. In Rottman v. Hevener, supra, 54 Cal.App. 474, it was held that in the absence of fraud or mistake, the time of payment as fixed by the written terms of a promissory note cannot be varied by any contemporaneous oral agreement; that the rule that a writing which purports to be the complete contract of the parties is deemed in law to be the full repository of the agreement or contract, that the whole contract is expressed by it, and that evidence of oral stipulations is not admissible to incorporate other elements in it or to alter or enlarge its terms, is applicable to negotiable as well as to nonnegotiable instruments.
It does appear that no accounting was ever had between the parties as alleged by defendants. Jay’s bookkeeper testified that she prepared an account of money owing to Jay, including the balance due on the promissory note, mailed it by registered mail, and it was returned to her, unclaimed. At the trial, the trial court inquired if this account was still in her possession and it was stated that it was uncertain. The trial judge asked for its production and it was agreed that if it was found it would be presented to him for his consideration before the decision was made. The case was submitted. There is no mention in the record whether it was produced, and, if so, whether the trial court examined it, or what it contained. The evidence would not support a finding that an accounting had been had or that the parties mutually agreed, for a consideration, that the note would be cancelled.
Judgment reversed.
Coughlin J., and Brown (G.), J., concurred.
Formerly Buies on Appeal, rule 17(b).