Boyd v. Bearce

291 P. 560, 48 Cal. App. 46, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 386
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2168.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 291 P. 560 (Boyd v. Bearce) 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
Boyd v. Bearce, 291 P. 560, 48 Cal. App. 46, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 386 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The appeal is from the judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff by the superior court of San Joaquin County. The defendant Bearce was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $2,958.68, evidenced by his promis *48 sory note in that amount, dated April 22, 1916, bearing interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum. Said note required the “interest to be paid annually, and if not so paid as it becomes due, to bear interest at the same rate as said principal sum, but if default be made in the payment of interest, then the principal sum of this note shall immediately become due at the option of the holder hereof.” The first year’s interest on the note was not paid and plaintiff’s attorneys wrote to defendant Bearee on May 11, 1917, demanding payment of the interest, and again on May 18th following, notifying said defendant that the plaintiff elected to declare the whole of said note due, and demanding payment of the sum. On May 22, 1917, defendant wrote to said, attorneys that he had paid the note in full, having purchased the same from the defendant M. P. Fries on or about the eighteenth day of May, 1917. About the fifteenth day of May, 1917, defendant Fries called upon plaintiff for the purpose of inducing her to let him have the Bearee note for collection. After some conversation Mrs. Boyd delivered the note to Fries and he in return gave, her his note for $1,600, and for security gave her 3,200 shares of the capital stock of Shasta National Copper Company and an agreement in writing as follows:

“Fresno, Calif., May 15, 1917.
“Mrs. Josephine P. Boyd,
“Fresno, Calif.
“Dear Madam: In addition to the secured note given you this date, I hereby promise and agree to pay all money collected on the Byron A. Bearee note given me this day, over and above the sum of $1,600.
“M. P. Fries.”

On May 15th Fries at Fresno called Mr. Bearee at Stoek'ton by telephone and asked him what he would pay for the Boyd note. Mr. Bearee finally agreed to pay fifty cents on the dollar and’ wired Fries to that effect. Several days later Fries came to Stockton with the note and Mr. Bearee, according to his testimony, on seeing that the same was properly indorsed, gave Fries a check for $1,350 and credited him with $250 on account of money which Fries at that time owed to Mr. Bearee. On November 6, 1917, Fries sent Mrs. Boyd a check for 'fifty-six dollars in payment of the sum semi-annually due on his note for $1,600. This *49 cheek was received by Mrs. Boyd and delivered to her attorney, Judge Harris, who on November 7th returned the same to Mr. Fries with the statement that Mrs. Boyd had not accepted Fries’ note. About six months later Fries sent another check to Mrs. Boyd for $112 covering the first year’s interest on his note for $1,600, and this was likewise returned to Fries. Thereafter Mrs. Boyd brought suit against Bearce for the full amount of the note, and the court gave her judgment for said full amount, together with $300 attorneys’ fees. Fries was never served and did not appear at the trial. [1] Plaintiff claimed in her complaint that Fries fraudulently obtained possession of said note and that defendant Bearce paid no consideration for it, and that at the time it was delivered to him he was familiar with the facts constituting the fraud consummated by Fries and that said defendant Bearce was not a purchaser in good faith. The court found that the fraud was perpetrated by Fries as alleged in the complaint, and, furthermore, as to Bearce, that it is not true that he paid po consideration for said note “and that it is not true that at the time it was delivered to said defendant Bearce he knew of the facts and circumstances of the loaning of said note to said defendant Fries by plaintiff, or the manner in which said defendant Fries came into the possession thereof, or that the plaintiff was the owner of said note, or entitled to the possession thereof and in that behalf the court finds that the defendant Bearce paid for said note the stim of $1,350 and no more and gave said defendant Fries in addition to said sum a credit for $250 and no more; that while defendant Bearce did not have actual knowledge of the facts and circumstances of said note as aforesaid and the manner in which said defendant Fries came into possession thereof, said defendant Bearce had sufficient information to put a reasonable person upon inquiry and such inquiry would have disclosed the fact that said Fries got possession of said note through fraudulent representations; that said note was not indorsed by said plaintiff; that said Fries never had title to said note and never had right of possession thereof, and never had the right or authority to transfer or dispose of or to collect said note or any part thereof.”

*50 As to the first of these considerations it may be said that the finding of the court is abundantly supported. The testimony of plaintiff and her husband, or of either, is sufficient for that purpose. It may be admitted that the transaction as detailed by plaintiff presents a somewhat peculiar aspect, but her account is not inherently improbable, and we cannot say that the lower court was not justified in believing her. The trial judge, of course, had the advantages that go with a personal contact with the witnesses, and having been convinced that plaintiff was “an elderly woman, unskilled in the ways of the world, and apparently an easy prey,” he had no difficulty in reconciling her eccentric conduct with the theory of her veracity and entire innocence of any wrongdoing. Indeed, the sufficiency of the showing as to this first branch of the case does not seem to be seriously disputed.

. The other question is more worthy of careful consideration.

[2] In viewing it, the trial judge in the first place had regard to the fact that the note, having a provision for acceleration of the time of payment of the principal if any installment of interest was not paid, was non-negotiable. (Wetzel v. Cale, 175 Cal. 208, [165 Pac. 692].) Therefore, under the decisions, any subsequent purchaser or holder is held to a stricter accountability as to notice of any infirmity in the title of the one transferring it than in case of a negotiable instrument. This circumstance is of some moment in testing the sufficiency of the showing made to justify the court’s conclusion that appellant was not an innocent purchaser.

[3] One fact, to which great significance was attached, is that appellant paid only about forty-two cents on the dollar for his note. There is no evidence that he was insolvent or unable to pay the full amount due, and the circumstance that he was thus permitted to purchase it at such a discount would naturally excite the suspicions of an honest man, and should have led to an inquiry as to the circumstances under which Fries secured possession of the note. Inadequacy of consideration is, indeed, not conclusive, but the authorities generally hold that it is a circumstance proper to be considered in determining the question of good faith. It is so held in Clark v. Troy, 20 Cal. 220. The question *51

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Bluebook (online)
291 P. 560, 48 Cal. App. 46, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-bearce-calctapp-1920.