Boland v. Smith
Boland v. Smith
Opinion of the Court
Carlin G. Smith brought this action to enforce rescission of a contract for the purchase of an automobile. Judgment was awarded in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, and defendants appeal. (After judgment there was a substitution of parties plaintiff by reason of an assignment made by plaintiff Carlin G. Smith to Boland.)
*405 On June 12, 1912, plaintiff Smith negotiated with defendant Stanley W. Smith and C. F. Smith, since deceased, for the purchase of an automobile, and on that date paid a deposit of five hundred dollars. A written contract in the form of a memorandum order was drawn up and signed by the purchaser and the vendors. The automobile was not at the time in the hands of the vendors ready for delivery, but was to be shipped from the factory at an eastern point, and the written contract provided that the delivery was to be made “on or about out of first shipment of this model.” The signature of the plaintiff first appeared attached to the order, and over the signature of the vendors was the following clause: “We agree to fulfill all the terms and conditions of this order, subject to delay resulting from fires, strikes, action of elements, and other circumstances beyond our control.” No delivery of the car having been made, on the 25th of November, 1912, the plaintiff served a written notice of rescission upon the vendors and demanded the return to him of the five hundred dollars deposited. The court, in its findings of fact, recited that defendants had represented to plaintiff that they had several shipments of models of the kind of car desired coming and that the first shipment would reach Los Angeles on or about the first day of July; that the defendants failed to make delivery of the car on July 1st, but stated to plaintiff that shipment had been delayed and that the car would be shortly delivered, and at various times between July 1st and October 17, 1912, the vendors represented and stated that shipment of said car would shortly be made; that on the seventeenth day of October thé vendors specifically promised and agreed to make delivery of the ear not later than three weeks from that date, to wit, not later than November 17, 1912; that the vendors received a shipment of the model of the ear contracted to be delivered on or about the twenty-fifth day of December, and on the 26th of that month notified the plaintiff of the receipt of the car and offered to make delivery thereof. The court further found “that defendants have wholly refused and failed to make delivery of any car under the terms of their contract with the plaintiff within a reasonable time, and have failed and refused to return to plaintiff the sum of five hundred dollars.”
*406
Section 1860 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: ‘‘For the proper construction of an instrument, the circumstances under which it was made, including the situation of the subject of the instrument, and of the parties to it, may also be shown, so that the judge be placed in the position of those whose language he is to interpret.” We think that the testimony was competent to explain the conditions, in view of the fact that no date of delivery was fixed in the written contract and nothing therein was shown as to whether the shipment of automobiles had already been ordered or as to when such shipment would be made. In our opinion, under the terms of the contract, it should be said that the obligation of the vendors was to have delivery *407 made of the ear within a reasonable time. What would amount to a reasonable time for shipment from the east and receipt in Los Angeles, would depend upon conditions within the knowledge of the vendors, and for that reason we think it was proper for the court to receive testimony touching the representations and statements made by the vendors on the subject of delivery. While in the plaintiff’s testimony conversations were shown between the plaintiff and one of the vendors, which conversations occurred subsequent to the making of the contract, those conversations were not relied upon by the trial judge as fixing a new and definite date upon which the automobile was agreed to be delivered, but only as showing the continuing conditions as to the nondelivery and the explanations made by the vendors in attempted excuse of the same, all of which was competent as going to the question as to whether at the time the plaintiff gave notice of rescission there had been an unreasonable delay on the part of the vendors in the delivery of the automobile. The court directly determined that the delay was unreasonable and, upon the evidence shown, wé think that that conclusion was justified.
No other points are presented which require consideration or discussion.
The judgment is affirmed.
Conrey,. P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.