Ainsworth v. Bank of California

51 P. 952, 119 Cal. 470, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 923
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1897
DocketS. F. No. 947
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 51 P. 952 (Ainsworth v. Bank of California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ainsworth v. Bank of California, 51 P. 952, 119 Cal. 470, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 923 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

The facts are admitted and found to he as follows: September 37, 1895, George J. Ainsworth, plaintiff’s testator, executed his note to the Bank of California for $10,000, payable December 30, 1895. He was a customer of the bank, and at his death, October 30, 1895, had on deposit there to his •credit the sum of $5,974.35. On December 36, 1895, the day the note matured, the bank, without the consent of respondent, applied this sum on the note. On December 30, 1895, letters testamentary were issued to respondent by the superior court of Alameda county. February 17, 1896, respondent presented her check for said deposit to the bank and demanded payment, which was refused. February 31, 1896, the bank presented its claim on said note therein, crediting it with said sum of $5,974.53, which claim was rejected on March 3d. On March 9, 1896, plaintiff commenced her action to recover the sum so deposited. In its answer the bank set up its presented claim and claimed the right to use it as a counterclaim under sections 437 and 438 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and also the right to apply said •deposit on said note by virtue of its banker’s lien, and also that the two debts—the note and said deposit of $5,974.53—should he deemed compensated, so far as they equal each other, under section 440 of the Code of Civil Procedure. There is no finding or evidence as to the solvency or insolvency of the estate. The court denied the right of defendant to use the note as a counterclaim, or to apply the said sum of $5,974.53 on the note, and denied the right to such “compensation.” Judgment was. given for plaintiff for $5,974.53, and for defendant for $10,000 [472]*472and interest payable in due course of administration. The appeal is from the judgment and comes here on bill of exceptions.

Under section 437 a defendant may answer by: “2. A statement of any new matter constituting a defense or counterclaim.” A counterclaim is, by section 438, defined to be: “One existing in favor of defendant and against a plaintiff, between whom a several judgment might be had in the action, and arising out of one of the following causes of action: .... 2. In an action arising upon contract; any other cause of action arising also upon contract and existing at the commencement of the action.”

Counsel for plaintiff make an ingenious argument to the effect that these sections simply prescribe a rule for pleading counterclaims—how to plead them and what qualities they must possess . in order that they may be pleaded—but leaves the question entirely open “as to what counterclaims are, and what are not, claims upon which a several judgment- might be had in the action.” It is true that section 438 says that the counterclaim mentioned in section 437 must possess certain elements, but it goes further, we think, and defines what-a counterclaim is, as well as when it may be pleaded. The section practically says that a counterclaim is defined to be what the section says may be pleaded as such. It is suggested by respondent that a rule which would allow .this counterclaim would, in many cases, take assets out of administration, through proceedings in which other creditors could not be heard; would pay one creditor to the exclusion of others; would render inoperative provisions for the temporary-support of the family of the deceased—to which all debts are-postponed; and therefore the rule cannot be sound. (Citing Fitzpatrick v. Brady, 6 Hill, 581; Leiper v. Levis, 15 Serg. & R. 108; Jordan v. National etc. Bank, 74 N. Y. 467; 30 Am. Rep. 319.)

Respondent makes the point also that the counterclaim should be rejected for want of mutuality, grounding the objection upon the fact that the note of deceased was not due when he died, and that nothing ever did become due from him; that plaintiff sued as executrix in her representative capacity for a debt due the deceased at his death, and her title and right of action are to be considered as of that date, as is also the right of defendant to Bet up the counterclaim, at which time nothing, was due defend[473]*473ant. (Citing Patterson v. Patterson, 59 N. Y. 574; 17 Am. Rep. 384.)

The contention is that if A owes B $1,000 upon a promissory note, and B owes A a like sum on a promissory note, both due on the same day in the future, and A meanwhile dies, A’s administrator may sue and recover when B’s note to A matures, but B cannot plead A’s note by way of counterclaim because B now owes the estate and not A, and there is no mutuality because a right of action on A’s note did not accrue in A’s lifetime. Such.' is the apparent reasoning of Patterson v. Patterson, supra, and also of Jordan v. National etc. Bank, supra, cited by respondent.

In the case cited from 6 Hill the pro rata distribution of an estate was not a question; the case is not in point. Leiper v. Levis, supra, was decided upon the construction given to the act of 1794, then in force in the state of Pennsylvania, and the question was as to the right of a judgment creditor of an insolvent estate gaining a priority over other judgment creditors by taking out and levying a fieri facias which related to a day prior to the intestate’s death. The case does not seem to throw any light on this case.

In Patterson v. Patterson, supra, plaintiff, as executrix, brought suit to foreclose a mortgage executed by defendant to plaintiff’s testator given to secure a promise in the nature of an annuity, which by its terms was made to depend upon the testator’s death, and was payable to his executrix or administratrix after his death. Defendant set up as counterclaim a claim for rent due him from the testator at the time of his decease. It was said there was no mutuality, and the setoff was disallowed. The case follows the construction given by the English courts to the statute of 2 George II, chapter 22, to which the Hew York statute was similar. The decision is well considered and was followed in Jordan v. National etc. Bank, supra. The statute of New York (2 Rev. Stats., sec. 23) reads: “In suits brought by executors, etc., demands existing against their testators, etc., and belonging to the defendant at the time of their death, may be set off by the defendant in the same manner as if the action had been brought by and in the name of the deceased.” The case of Patterson v. Patterson, supra, does not necessarily support respondent, although, as interpreted in Jordan v. National [474]*474etc. Bank, supra, it may be so applied. In this latter case the reflation of the claims of the parties was the reverse of Patterson v. Patterson, supra. Jordan sued as administratrix on a demand owned by the intestate in his lifetime, and due and payable to him then; while the promissory note which defendant sought to -set off, though owned by it in the lifetime of the intestate, was not due and payable until after his death. It was held that for •a demand to be set off against an executor or administrator, in an action brought by him, it must have been due and payable from the decedent in his lifetime. We think that the provisions of our section 438 of the Code of Civil Procedure, read with section 440, are different from the New York statute. The clause “any other cause of action arising upon contract, and existing at the commencement of the action” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 438, subd. 2) is "not in the New York statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 P. 952, 119 Cal. 470, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ainsworth-v-bank-of-california-cal-1897.