Rayfield v. Van Meter

120 Cal. 416 | Cal. | 1898

BRITT, C.

On September 4, 1890, the parties to this action entered into a contract in writing whereby plaintiff covenanted to sell to defendant certain household- furniture at the price of eighteen hundred and thirty dollars, of which price the sum of one thousand dollars was then paid and the residue was to be paid on or before September 4, 1891, plaintiff to give a bill of sale of the furniture on receiving such deferred payment; defendant received immediate possession of the goods, but agreed on his part that if he failed to pay the said balance he would restore such possession to plaintiff on demand. In due time plaintiff tendered to defendant a bill of sale and demanded payment of the said balance of eight hundred and thirty dollars; he refused payment and refused to restore the goods. On ¡November 6, 1891, plaintiff brought this action to recover said goods, and obtained possession thereof by process of claim and delivery. In a cross-complaint defendant alleged that he entered into said contract under the influence of fraud and also duress practiced by plaintiff; that she had replevied the property, and that the consideration for his promise to pay said balance had failed; he prayed that he recover the sum of one thousand dollars already paid, less such compensation to plaintiff for the use of the goods as justice might require. In August, 1893, plaintiff began selling the property, piece by piece, and so disposed of the whole of it; this for the reason testified by her that “the storage charges were very large, and the property was continually deteriorating in value.” The trial was had in August, 1895; the findings negatived defendant’s allegations respecting fraud and duress, and declared the right of plaintiff to possession of the goods at the commencement of *418the action; the facts concerning the replevin and subsequent sale of the goods by plaintiff were found, and the court decided, as the net result, that by selling the goods after she had replevied them the plaintiff rescinded her contract with defendant, and that he was entitled to recover of her his payment of one thousand dollars, less the value of the use of the goods during the time they were in his possession, fixed at four hundred and twenty dollars; he being allowed also interest on the excess of said payment above such rental.

There was no supplemental pleading to raise the question on which the case was made to turn, viz., the effect of the sale of the goods by plaintiff after she had regained possession of them, but, as appellant makes no point on the procedure, we shall consider it as one properly presented by the record. The defendant himself put an end to the contract if plaintiff chose to so regard it. “In cases of this sort, where the question is whether the one party is set free by the action of the other, the real matter for consideration is, whether the acts or conduct of the one do or do not amount to an intimation to abandon and altogether to refuse performance of the contract.” (Lord Coleridge, C. J.,in Freeth v. Burr, L. R. 9 Com. P. 213.) Perhaps the language of the eminent chief justice was hardly sufficiently stringent in allowing that a mere intimation of such intention may dissolve a contract; but it is apparent that in this case the defendant’s purpose to refuse performance was distinctly and unequivocally evinced; his refusal to pay the deferred installment of purchase money was continued for nearly two years before plaintiff, having lawfully regained possession of the goods, made sale of them, and by his pleading in the action he repudiated any further obligation under the contract; in which respects, as the findings of the court show, his conduct was without lawful justification. By these acts the vinculum juris arising from the contract was broken, and there was nothing which plaintiff needed to rescind.

A buyer who, without lawful excuse, refuses to go forward i with his contract is not entitled to recover back money paid on account thereof. (Bradford v. Parkhurst, 96 Cal. 102; 31 Am. St. Rep. 189; Hansbrough v. Peck, 5 Wall. 497.) Those were eases of sales of lands, but the principle has at least as extensive application to agreements for sale of personalty. (Tiedeman on Sales, *419sec. 210; 2 Schouler on Personal Property, see. 298.) It is immaterial that plaintiff sold the goods. In Ketchum v. Evertson, 13 Johns. 359, 7 Am. Dec. 384, an action for money paid on a contract for the conveyance of land, it was justly and forcibly remarked: “To say that the subsequent sale of the land gives a right to the plaintiff to recover back the money paid on the contract would, in effect, be saying that the defendant could never sell it without subjecting himself to an action by the plaintiffs. Why should he not sell? The plaintiffs renounced the contract and peremptorily refused to fulfill it; it was vain, therefore, to keep the land for them. The plaintiffs cannot, by their own wrongful act, impose upon the defendant the necessity of retaining property which his exigencies may require him to sell. This would be most unreasonable and unjust, and is not sanctioned by any principle of law.” These views are equally appropriate to a case of sale of chattels. (Neis v. O’Brien, 12 Wash. 358; 50 Am. St. Rep. 894.) Defendant here relies somewhat on Miller v. Steen, 30 Cal. 402, 89 Am. Dec. 124, where it was said that a seller cannot claim both the property and the money paid in pursuance of a contract for sale of it. But there" the purchasers, so far from refusing performance of the contract dr denying its obligation, had come in sufficient season and tendered the balance unpaid for the goods and insisted on observance of the contract—circumstances which make all the difference in cases of this nature. (Packer v. Button, 35 Vt. 192-94; see Central Pac. Co. v. Mudd, 59 Cal. 588.)

Section 1749 off the Civil Code provides: “If a buyer of personal property does not pay for it according to contract, and it remains in the possession of the seller after payment is due, the seller may rescind the sale, or may enforce his lien for the price, in the manner prescribed by the title on liens.” Defendant claims, as we understand the argument, that since plaintiff did not adopt the latter alternative mentioned in section 1749, the law compels her to the first—that is to rescission, and consequent restoration of the payment she had received. The case, however, is without the scope of that section; there was no sale of the property to defendant—only an agreement for sale, which was terminated as we have seen; by retaking the property the plaintiff lost the right to compel payment of the *420balance of the purchase price (Central Pac. R. R. Co. v. Mudd, supra; Benjamin on Sales, 6th (Bennett’s) ed., 284); and had at most but an unliquidated claim for damages for defendant’s breach; hence: 1. There was no sale requiring rescission.; and 2. There was no lien requiring enforcement, within the meaning of said section 1749. (Gibbs v. Ranard, 86 Cal. 531; Hewes v. Germain Fruit Co., 106 Cal. 441; Civ. Code, sec. 3311.)

It is contended that in equity the defendant' should recover the sum paid less a proper compensation for the use had by him of the goods. But the'grounds for equitable relief against the contract pleaded by defendant were found against him by the court, and he stands in the position of one who willfully refused to comply with his agreement; it seems to us that there is little equity and certainly no sound policy in allowing a buyer under such circumstances to be, at pleasure, quit of his contract with no other liability than such as the law would have implied had there been no contract of sale at all. No case is made for the interposition of equity. (Civ. Code, sec. 3275; Tiedeman on Sales, sec. 219; Parsons v. Smilie, 97 Cal. 647; Hicks v. Lovell, 64 Cal. 20, 21; 49 Am. Rep. 679; Thirlby v. Rainbow, 93 Mich. 168, 169.) The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed.

Belcher, O., and Chipman, C., concurred..

For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are reversed.

Henshaw, J., McFarland, J., Temple, J.

Hearing in Bank denied.

midpage