178 P. 547 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1918
Plaintiffs appeal from two judgments dismissing their action as to defendants Hammel and Barrett and as to the Domestic Utilities Manufacturing Company, after orders sustaining the demurrers of said defendants to plaintiffs' complaint, plaintiffs having declined to amend.
The complaint is very long, somewhat involved, and contains various ambiguities and uncertainties, which, however, are not attacked by the demurrers. From it we gather the following facts: In August, 1910, plaintiffs received from the defendant corporation two certain contracts of sale for specified lots of so-called "vacuum clothes-washers." For one of these contracts plaintiffs paid the sum of $150; for the other they deeded to one of the defendants the real property described in the complaint. Plaintiffs were induced thereto by various false representations and devices so grossly fraudulent as to impel the courts to make every effort within the law to afford relief therefrom. The defendants Hammel and Barrett are in no way charged with actual participation in the frauds.
After receiving the contracts and parting with their property and before discovery of the fraud, plaintiffs were further induced by defendants to transfer to defendant Hellman (an agent of and co-conspirator with other defendants), their interest in the washers covered by the second contract, and *207 accepted in exchange therefor a conveyance from Hellman of certain other real property.
On November 4, 1910, the property which had been theretofore conveyed by plaintiffs was mortgaged to defendant Barrett, who thereafter foreclosed, became the purchaser at the sale thereunder, and eventually received a sheriff's deed pursuant thereto. Defendant Hammel's only connection with the case was through acting as sheriff in making the sale under foreclosure and executing the sheriff's deed.
Plaintiffs discovered the fraud on or about November 4, 1910, and immediately commenced an action in the superior court to rescind their various transactions with defendants. They did not, however, restore or offer to restore to defendants anything which they had received as the fruits of said transactions. Thereafter, on December 6, 1911, they tendered to defendants the washers which they had received under the first contract, and then dismissed their action and filed two new actions for the same purpose. On December 11, 1911, plaintiffs quitclaimed back to defendant Hellman the real property they had received from her. On March 21, 1912, plaintiffs delivered back to defendants the contracts which they had received from them, together with a relinquishment of all their rights and claims thereunder. They then dismissed their two actions then pending and filed two new ones for the same purpose. These were later dismissed at the time of filing the present suit, April 14, 1914. The prayer in this action is for the cancellation of plaintiffs' deed to defendants, the mesne conveyances, the sheriff's deed to Barrett, and for general relief.
The gist and substance of the relief here sought is a rescission of plaintiff's contracts with defendants and the restoration of plaintiff's property. We are, therefore, constrained to the conclusion that this case is ruled by the case of Brown v. Domestic Utilities Mfg. Co.,
It is alleged in the complaint that the contracts in question were never intended by the defendants to be performed according to their terms; that they were mere shams, designed and used by the defendants as devices in the conduct of a so-called "endless chain" lottery fraud; and that they were therefore absolutely void. It does not clearly appear whether or not at the time plaintiffs accepted the contracts they were aware of this ulterior purpose. If they were, and shared in it, it follows that the contracts were void as against public policy. In such case it would also follow that a court would not afford relief to either of the parties to such contracts, but would leave them where it found them. (Berka v. Woodward,
To excuse their failure in not offering to restore what they had received as the fruits of these contracts, plaintiffs allege that they were not aware of the necessity for so doing. This cannot be regarded as a valid excuse. Parties seeking to avail themselves of the remedy afforded by this chapter of the code are chargeable with notice of the requirements thereof. The plaintiffs must be held to have known that "one cannot eat his pudding and have it."
The conclusion we have reached upon the questions here discussed renders it unnecessary to consider the questions arising under the statutes of limitations and the question of the rights of a mortgagee without actual notice as against parties in possession of the premises mortgaged.
The judgments appealed from are affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.