Dunlap v. Sunset Lumber Co.

146 P. 53, 26 Cal. App. 131, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 14
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1301.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 P. 53 (Dunlap v. Sunset Lumber Co.) 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
Dunlap v. Sunset Lumber Co., 146 P. 53, 26 Cal. App. 131, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 14 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

HART, J.

The plaintiff brought this action for the purpose of securing a decree canceling a certain promissory note and a certain deed of trust, said note having been executed in favor of and delivered to the defendant corporation by her and her husband, and said deed of trust executed by her to secure the payment of said note.

The sum and substance of the allegations of the complaint is that the note in suit was and is not, so far as the plaintiff is concerned, supported by a consideration.

The defendants answered the complaint, specifically denying each and all of its material averments, and also filed a cross-complaint, setting forth the facts constituting a history of the transaction leading to this action and declaring that the trustees under the deed had in accordance with the terms *132 of said deed, sold the property which was the subject of said deed at public auction for the sum of two hundred and seventy-five dollars, the highest bid offered for the same, and that, after paying the legal expenses of said sale, the said trustees paid the balance of the sum so received, to wit: the sum of one hundred and thirty-five dollars, to the defendant corporation and that said sum was by it applied to the debt, to secure the payment of which the note and the trust deed in controversy were executed.

The prayer of the cross-complaint is that judgment be awarded the defendant corporation against the plaintiff that “she take nothing by this action, and that this defendant may have judgment against the plaintiff, Emma M. Dunlap, and defendant, George T. Dunlap, for the sum of $5,060.60, with interest,” etc.

Judgment was rendered and entered in favor of the Sunset Company and against the plaintiff and the defendant, George T. Dunlap, in accordance with the prayer of the cross-complaint. The plaintiff appeals from said judgment, support^ ing said appeal by a transcript of the testimony prepared in pursuance of the provisions of section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The principal point made by the plaintiff is that the findings are not supported by the evidence.

The action grows out of a transaction whereby George T. Dunlap, the husband of the plaintiff, became the owner of one-third of the capital stock of the Clayton Advertising Company, a corporation, which was, at the time said transaction took place, engaged in the business of “out-door” advertising in the city of Oakland.

It appears that said Clayton Advertising Company was, prior and down to the date of the note in question (December 9, 1909) indebted to the defendant, Sunset Lumber Company, on an open account, in the sum of $4,816.84, for goods, wares, and merchandise sold and money advanced to the first named company.

It further appears that certain persons who were connected in official capacities with the defendant corporation were stockholders and members of the board of directors and officers of the Clayton Company. These persons were E. H. Nash, J. E. Neal, and C. S. Lamb, and were, respectively, the general manager, the bookkeeper, and the sales manager of *133 the Sunset Company. They, with one C. L. Clayton, held all of the issued capital stock of the Clayton Company. Neither the plaintiff nor her husband, George T. Dunlap, was in any way connected with either of said corporations prior to the execution of the promissory note in question, nor was the plaintiff at any time, either prior or subsequent to the ninth day of December, 1909, the date of said note, an officer, a director of, or a stockholder in the Clayton Company. While this indebtedness of the Clayton Company to the Sunset Company still existed, negotiations were had between the said George T. Dunlap and the above named stockholders of the former concern, who, as seen, were also connected with the Sunset Company, which resulted in an agreement whereby one-third of the capital stock of the Clayton Company was to be transferred to said Dunlap in consideration of the payment by Dunlap of the debt due from the Clayton Company to the Sunset Company. Pending these negotiations and before they were consummated, however, Dunlap presented the proposition to his wife (the plaintiff) and requested her to join him in the execution of a promissory note in favor of the Sunset Company for the amount of said debt and at the same time asked her to make and execute the deed of trust in question to secure the payment of said note. Mrs. Dunlap assented to this proposition, and, accordingly, joined her husband in the execution of said note and made the deed of trust, which latter instrument covered a city lot, situated in the city of Oakland, and which lot was at all times her sole and separate property, the same having been purchased by her with money obtained through the estate of her deceased father.

After the delivery of said note and the execution and delivery of said deed of trust, certain shares of the stock of the Clayton Company were transferred to George T. Dunlap. The plaintiff, as before stated, did not then, nor at any other time, become a stockholder in said company.

The note above mentioned was given directly to the Sunset Company. The defendants, E. H. Nash, J. E. Neal, J. R. Pereira, Jr., and George T. Dunlap were, except the last named defendant, trustees under the deed of trust and as such were proceeded against as necessary parties.

The specific contention of the plaintiff is, stating it in the language of her counsel, that since, “according to the find *134 ings, the note and the trust-deed were not made or delivered until long after the obligations of the Clayton Company to the Sunset Company arose and became due and payable,” and, since “said promissory note formed no part of the original transaction between these two companies, Mrs. Dunlap became but a surety for the antecedent obligation of the Clayton Company and that as such surety it was necessary that a valid consideration pass between herself and the Sunset Company to hold her upon the note in suit; that Mrs. Dunlap did not become the surety of her husband, as there was no obligation of any kind due from her husband to the Sunset Company or to the Clayton Company.” Hence, it is contended, there was, in the execution of said note by the plaintiff, no consideration moving to her from either of said companies, or from her husband. It follows, so the argument proceeds, that the findings, which accord with the theory of the defendants that the transaction whereby one-third of the capital stock of the Clayton Company was transferred to George T. Dunlap involved a sale of said stock to the latter in consideration of the assumption by him of the payment of the debt due the Sunset Company from the Clayton Company, are not supported by the evidence.

After making findings negativing certain averments of the complaint, the court made the following finding, which is reproduced here in full because it involves a statement of all the ultimate facts essential to the support of the judgment:

“That on or about the — day of December, 1909, and prior to the execution of said promissory note, the said plaintiff and the said George T. Dunlap entered into an agreement with defendant Sunset Lumber Company, acting by and through its agents, E. H. Nash, C. S. Lamb and J. E. Neal, under and by which the said George T.

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Bluebook (online)
146 P. 53, 26 Cal. App. 131, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-sunset-lumber-co-calctapp-1914.