Reversing.
The appellant, whom we shall refer to as the motor company, has appealed from a judgment of $724.40 recovered against it by W.A. Green.
Green then delivered his Dodge sedan to the motor company which repaired it, and traded it off.
In due season Green notified the motor company he would take the Buick 68-C, for which he would by the contract have to pay a balance of $1,270.60 in cash or could pay for it in eighteen monthly payments of $84.94 each, and that he would want it on April 18, 1933. On April 17th he called on the motor company. It had the car ready for delivery, but insisted that Green give surety on the purchase. Green refused to do that, and the motor company refused to deliver the car. The next day Green called again with like result.
"Wherefore the plaintiff prays that this contract be rescinded and declared a nullity and that this plaintiff recover of the defendant, Black Motor Company, the difference in the purchase price of one Buick car Model 68-C with six wire wheels, which was $1,995.00, which car was agreed to be delivered by the defendant, and the balance of such purchase price which this plaintiff agreed to pay therefor, to-wit: $1,270.60, or $724.40. He prays to recover his costs herein expended and prays for such other general and equitable relief to which he may appear to be entitled."
According to the pleading and evidence for the motor company, it now sought out Green and offered to let him have the Buick 68-C upon his individual contract without surety, but Green refused to sign.
Thereupon the motor company filed its answer wherein it alleged it did not agree to purchase Green's Dodge sedan except by taking it as part payment on the purchase of a new car, that it was not worth exceeding $200, and prayed that Green's recovery should not exceed that figure.
Later the motor company repurchased the Dodge sedan, and by an amended answer tendered it to Green, alleging it was then mechanically better than when Green parted with it. Without another step being taken, Green dismissed his equity suit without prejudice. *Page 75
When it was instituted the motor company held Green's contract to purchase from it an automobile and had received from Green his Dodge sedan as part payment thereon. Green demanded a rescission, whereupon the motor company said: "All right, here's your car." That put an end to the contract just as effectually as if Green had prosecuted his suit to a successful conclusion. See Black on Rescission and Cancellation (2d Ed.) sec. 529. After this contract was rescinded, it was of no effect whatever, and no action can be based upon it for breach or anything else. It is at an end and the parties are supposed to be as they were before it was made.
The trial court appears to have sustained this demurrer upon what was supposed to be the authority of Goldberger Iron Co. v. Cincinnati Iron Steel Co., *Page 76 153 Ky. 20, 154 S.W. 374. On April 9, 1910, the Cincinnati Iron Steel Company filed two suits in Ohio; one was filed on a note for $4,800 against Jos. Goldberger individually; the other was a suit for $4,800, for the conversion of a shear, and was filed against the Joseph Goldberger Iron Company, a corporation, to which Goldberger had sold the shear. Later the Cincinnati Iron Steel Company filed a suit in Kentucky against the Joseph Goldberger Iron Company, Incorporated, and attached its property in Kentucky, and it then dismissed the two Ohio suits without prejudice. When that litigation reached this court, it was contended here that suit for conversion could not be maintained in Kentucky after the Cincinnati Iron Steel Company had sued on the note in Ohio. That was not error for two reasons. The suit on the note was against Jos. Goldberger individually, and the Kentucky suit for conversion was against Joseph Goldberger Iron Company, Incorporated, was one reason, and another was the Ohio suits were never prosecuted to a conclusion. In the case before us the parties to the suit for rescission and the suit for breach are the same. The suit for rescission was prosecuted to a successful conclusion. Green got his contract rescinded, which was what he sued for, and there are elements of estoppel in this case which did not appear in the Goldberger case. Barely canceling a contract may not, however, do entire equity between the parties. On rescinding a contract, the law implies that each party is to be placed in statu quo ante. Carneal's Heirs v. May, 2 A. K. Marsh. (9 Ky.) 587, 12 Am. Dec. 453; 6 Rawle C. L. p. 936, sec. 319; 13 C. J. p. 619, sec. 678; Black on Recission and Cancellation (2d Ed.) sec. 535. "An absolute and literal restoration of the parties to their former condition" is not required; it is "sufficient if such restoration be made as is reasonably possible and such as the merits of the case demand." Fairbanks, Morse Co. v. Walker, 76 Kan. 903, 92 P. 1129, 17 L.R.A. (N.S.) 558. The property must be returned in as good or substantially as good condition as when received. Edison Fixture Co. v. Maccaferri, 250 Mass. 460, 146 N.E. 3; Kawecki v. Stuber-Stone Co., 218 Mich. 25, 187 N.W. 272; Hirsch v. Verschuur, 93 N. J. Law, 277, 108 A. 181; Advance-Rumely Thresher Co. v. Stohl, 75 Utah, 124, 283 P. 731.
The restored goods do not have to be in the identical *Page 77 condition they were in when received, and the law is satisfied if they are so substantially so that neither party will be materially enriched or impoverished. Black on Rescission and Cancellation (2d Ed.) sec. 926, note 193.
This contract was rescinded without an understanding as to restoration; therefore the law implies full restoration is to be made. Green says in brief that the Dodge sedan when tendered back to him has been so used and abused as to greatly reduce its value. He should set that up by pleading, and if on final hearing it should be found that the Dodge sedan as and when tendered back to Green was not in substantially as good condition as it was as and when turned over to the motor company, then Green should recover of the motor company the reasonable value of this Dodge sedan as, when, and where it was turned over to the motor company, and it should be adjudged the owner of it; but if it be found this Dodge sedan as and when tendered back to Green was in substantially as good condition as it was as and when turned over to the motor company, then Green should take nothing but the Dodge sedan, and the motor company should recover of him its cost. Of course Green cannot recover for any diminution in value of this Dodge sedan resulting solely from the lapse of time or obsolescence of its pattern or design.
Judgment reversed, with directions to overrule the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer and for consistent proceedings.