Bledsoe v. Stuckey

190 P. 217, 47 Cal. App. 95, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 435
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2540.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 190 P. 217 (Bledsoe v. Stuckey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bledsoe v. Stuckey, 190 P. 217, 47 Cal. App. 95, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 435 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

This action was brought to recover an alleged balance of $313.30 on a promissory note for $2,675, and to foreclose a chattel mortgage securing the same. Defendant by his answer pleaded payment of the note in full, and by cross-complaint seeks to recover from plaintiff "the sum of $546, which defendant claims to have paid by mistake, in excess • of his indebtedness on the transaction. The judgment was that plaintiff take nothing by his action, and that the defendant recover the amount of overpayment alleged in his cross-complaint.

The main contention on the appeal is as to the application of two payments, aggregating $700, made by defendant to the plaintiff prior to the execution of the note sued on.

The transaction out of which the entire controversy grows was substantially as follows: In May, 1911, an agreement was entered into between the parties whereby the plaintiff sold to the defendant a lot of cattle and all of plaintiff’s interest under a certificate of purchase from the state of *97 California in 280 acres of land in Kern County. The price to be paid for the land was $400, as a fixed sum, with a further payment of $600 if plaintiff’s interest in a portion of the tract should be confirmed by the courts in pending litigation with certain adverse claimants. The number of head of livestock purchased was not specified in the original agreement, further than that defendant was to take all of plaintiff’s cattle at $22.50 per head, excepting some fifteen or twenty head, which plaintiff reserved. There is conflict in the evidence as to.how many head of cattle were actually sold and delivered to defendant.

The evidence taken on the trial shows that at the date of the original agreement defendant paid to appellant on account of the transaction $200, and in December of the same year the further sum of $500. Subsequently, on January 15, 1912, by way of an adjustment of his indebtedness, defendant executed the promissory note sued on, for the principal sum of $2,675, and a chattel mortgage securing the same on 120 head of the cattle purchased from plaintiff and 100 additional cattle of his own. The defendant testified that he only received 120 head of cattle from the plaintiff, and that this note and mortgage for $2,675 covered the price he was to pay for them. It is conceded that the land litigation was determined later in plaintiff’s favor, and that defendant, subsequent to the execution of the note, became liable for the additional $600 agreed to be paid for the land, making a total liability on the entire transaction, according to defendant’s contention, and as the court found, of $3,675. Defendant claims credit on this amount for the two payments aggregating $700 made prior to the note and mortgage, which, if allowed, with the subsequent payments shown in evidence, would leave the balance in defendant’s favor as claimed under his cross-complaint. Plaintiff’s testimony is to the effect that there were at least 140 head of cattle sold to defendant, besides one or two horses; that the entire indebtedness was several hundred dollars in excess of $3,675; and that the $700 paid prior to the execution of the note and mortgage left a balance of $2,675 for which the note was given, besides the contingent balance of $600 on the land.

If the only question involved was the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings of the court, we would be *98 compelled under this conflict in the testimony to uphold the findings under the contention of defendant that his total indebtedness amounted to only $3,675, and that he was entitled to credit thereon- for the $200 and $500 payments made prior to the execution of the note. [1] But it is contended on behalf of appellant that the admission of evidence of these prior payments as applying toward the satisfaction of the note was error. This testimony was objected to by appellant on the ground that it was an attempt to dispute the terms of a written contract; that by the terms of the note, executed long after these payments were made, it was stipulated and agreed that at the date of the execution of the note defendant was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $2,675; and that an attempt to reduce the amount by credits arising from previous transactions between the parties was varying the terms of a written instrument by parol evidence. We do not see how this conclusion is to be avoided. The execution of this note was the written declaration, in the most decisive manner, of a present indebtedness of $2,675. It was, moreover, a stating of account between the parties. (Kinley v. Thelen, 158 Cal. 175, 183, [110 Pac. 513].) There is no attempt to avoid it by any allegation or showing of fraud or mistáke; and we do not see on what theory defendant could be permitted to say that the amount of his liability was not what the note called for, but $700 less than that sum. It cannot be shown by parol that the sum to become payable under the terms of the note is different from that specified, nor that a certain prior account was to be deducted from the note. (Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 81.) Parol evidence cannot prove a contemporaneous condition which might reduce a specified sum payable on the note. (2 Parson on Bills and Notes, p. 506.) In Eaves v. Henderson, reported in 17 Wend. (N. Y.), 190, the defendant sought to set off on a suit upon his promissory note certain amounts due him on account with the plaintiff prior to the execution of the note. The court held this to be an attempt to contradict the amount expressed in the note, and that the evidence was inadmissible—even though in that case it was claimed that at the time the note was executed it was agreed by the payee that the items of the account should apply on the note.

*99 If it be argued that if these disputed payments of $200 and $500 should be held to be not applicable in reducing the amount due under the note sued on they at least represent a liability for money had and received by the plaintiff without consideration, and hence recoverable by cross-complaint, in this action, the answer to this is the plea of the statute of limitations set out in plaintiff’s answer to the cross-complaint these payments having been made upward of four years prior to the filing of the cross-complaint. Of course, the payments made after the execution of the note, and properly applicable as payments thereon, to which plaintiff also pleads the statute of limitations, are not subject to the bar of the statute, for the reason that they applied as payments as of the date of their receipt by plaintiff. We think, too, in further bar of the claim that these two payments are applicable in reduction of the amount of the note and mortgage, that paragraph 2 of defendant’s cross-complaint is in effect an admission of a balance of indebtedness owing to plaintiff at the time of the execution of the note and mortgage of $2,675. This indebtedness being evidenced at a date long after the payments were made, they clearly cannot be allowed in reduction of the amount so admitted to be owing by the cross-complainant and by the note itself.

Our conclusion on this point is, therefore, that on January 15, 1912, defendant’s indebtedness to plaintiff was fixed, beyond evasion by parol evidence, at the sum of $2,675, as shown by the note of that date.

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Bluebook (online)
190 P. 217, 47 Cal. App. 95, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bledsoe-v-stuckey-calctapp-1920.