Bolinger v. Giles

262 P. 1022, 125 Kan. 53, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 7, 1928
DocketNo. 27,797
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 262 P. 1022 (Bolinger v. Giles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolinger v. Giles, 262 P. 1022, 125 Kan. 53, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 269 (kan 1928).

Opinion

The opinion of the court 'was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

Plaintiff sued defendants for 12,000 on account of money and property obtained from her by defendants through fraudulent representations and without consideration. The pleadings were stated with sufficient detail when the case was here before (118 Kan. 761, 236 Pac. 658) and need not be repeated.

On the new trial-the evidence quite largely followed the trend of the former trial, and at the conclusion of plaintiffs evidence defendants demurred thereto. During the argument on the demurrer counsel for the plaintiff stated that he was willing to waive the tor.t and elect to recover on the theory that the defendants received plaintiff’s money without consideration. Thereupon the court announced that it would sustain the demurrer on that ground, and judgment was accordingly entered for defendants.

Hence this appeal, and the principal error assigned pertains to the ruling on the demurrer. To justify it, appellees invoke the doctrine of election of remedies which holds that when an aggrieved party has alternative courses of procedure open to him, either of which will afford him redress but which are inconsistent with each other, and one of these courses is adopted and-pursued, he is precluded from abandoning that course and adopting the other. C'But plaintiff did not prosecute alternative courses of procedure, nor seek to exact [55]*55alternative or inconsistent remedies. True, her petition contains ample recitals to state a cause of action in tort, but it also did state a cause of action for money had and received, and no objection was raised to her pleading. Plaintiff’s cause of action was founded on two quite consistent theories of defendants’ liability — one, that the defendants were liable to her for money and money’s worth as joint wrongdoers, and the other, that defendants were liable to her for money and money’s worth had and received without consideration. All the essential facts to recover on either theory of defendants’ liability were pleaded; the relief prayed for was single and identical —$2,000; there was no change of pleading or proof suggested by plaintiff; and the rule of this jurisdiction is that where a cause of action is sufficiently stated and sufficiently proved the court will adjudge and decree the proper legal redress, however that may differ from the pleader’s conception of it. (Bank v. Bank, 103 Kan. 865, 867, 176 Pac. 658; Ruf v. Grimes, 104 Kan. 335, 338, 179 Pac. 378; Wellington v. Insurance Co., 112 Kan. 687, 212 Pac. 892.) Nothing at variance with this is said in Ireland v. Waymire, 107 Kan. 384, 191 Pac. 304, or any of the cases treating of election of remedies cited by appellees.

When the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence was being argued the trial court remarked:

“I don’t see yet where Giles is liable. I can see from the supreme court decision where Barrett and Glancy are liable.”

Apparently it was merely to simplify matters that counsel for plaintiff then said that he would waive all consideration of the tort and stand on the proposition that defendants had received plaintiff’s money and property without consideration. This was proper and not unusual practice. It is the law that if two men obtain the money of a third without consideration, the latter has a cause of action for its recovery, and the question whether they obtained-the money by fraud is frequently immaterial. It was immaterial to a recovery in this case. According to the evidence, the truth of which was conceded by defendant’s demurrer, defendants Giles, Barrett, Glancy and others undertook to form a corporation or common-law trust, and contracted with plaintiff through their agent Glancy on that basis. By that contract, whether made by Glancy in innocence or fraud, a liability accrued when there was a total failure of consideration for plaintiff’s money and money’s worth. If it was an ordinary [56]*56corporation which defendants undertook to organize, but failed to do so, defendants are liable as partners for the obligations incurred on behalf of the abortive corporation. (Lithographing Co. v. Crist, 98 Kan. 723, 160 Pac. 198; Bank v. Niquette, 103 Kan. 410, 179 Pac. 360.) If it was a common-law trust, they were liable individually. (Linn v. Houston, 123 Kan. 409, 255 Pac. 1105.)

Giles’ relationship to the transaction whereby plaintiff parted with her money and money’s wo,rth was shown by the minutes of the abortive corporation, Las Crusadas Mining Company. He admitted that he participated in all its deliberations as shown by those minutes. He served as director, voted to elect Barrett as president and Corp as secretary-treasurer. Giles himself was elected- vice president, and voted in favor of a resolution “creating and delegating A. N. Glancy to act as fiscal agent for this company;” and voted to authorize Barrett to “proceed in any manner he decreed best to finance the corporation.” Such a course of conduct on Giles’ part renders him liable if there is any liability resting on any of these defendants for the receipt of plaintiff’s money and property. Looking again at the petition, while many of its details concerning fraud must be regarded as waived — just as if she had failed to prove those details, it did allege that plaintiff delivered to Glancy, fiscal agent of defendants’ abortive corporation or trust, the sum of $805 in cash and assigned to him a contract note or due bill for $1,195, which was subsequently collected and retained by defendants.

“And the said A. N. Glancy did thereupon deliver the said contract and said check and note to the defendant W. W. Barrett for the use and benefit of the defendants and the defendants did thereby receive said sum of $2,000. . . .
“. . . That the only money paid into the said corporation was paid by the plaintiff and her husband and the same was received by the defendants, B. E. Giles and W. W. Barrett, and wholly converted to their own use.”

It was shown that Glancy received plaintiff’s money and contract note as alleged and that he delivered the same to Barrett. And since Giles and the others had conferred a fiscal agency on Glancy and an agency with plenary powers on Barrett, a delivery of plaintiff’s money and contract to Barrett was a delivery to all concerned, which of course included Giles. It is therefore clear that the trial court’s ruling on the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence was erroneous and cannot stand.

[57]*57We have also a cross appeal in this case. After this court decided that plaintiff’s cause of action was sufficiently pleaded and proved against a demurrer to her evidence and remanded the cause for a new trial, plaintiff filed an action against the executor of the estate of her late husband, William Bolinger, in which she charged that her husband had been an agent of Barrett, Giles, Glancy and others, and that he induced her to invest $2,000 in defendants’ abortive “Las Crusadas Mining Company,” and that she received no consideration therefor except. certain worthless certificates purporting to be the obligations of a common-law trust. In this action, also, she alleged that relying implicitly on certain false statements of her husband and another she had been induced to invest $5,000 in another worthless concern, the Uhls Clinic Corporation. Another matter also involved in that litigation was an antenuptial contract which she sought to set aside. The action was compromised and settled by the payment of $9,000 to Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 P. 1022, 125 Kan. 53, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolinger-v-giles-kan-1928.