Dunne v. Independent Order of Foresters

196 P. 41, 185 Cal. 211, 18 A.L.R. 639, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 536
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1921
DocketS. F. Nos. 9005, 9155.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 196 P. 41 (Dunne v. Independent Order of Foresters) 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
Dunne v. Independent Order of Foresters, 196 P. 41, 185 Cal. 211, 18 A.L.R. 639, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 536 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

In this case three appeals are presented. By reason of the fact that the transcripts were filed at different times they received two numbers. No. 9005 is an appeal by the plaintiff from the part of the judgment denying her the relief asked in her complaint. No. 9155 presents appeals by the defendant from the part of the judgment which denied it relief upon its cross-complaint and from an order denying its motion that the judgment entered be vacated, and for the entry of a judgment in its favor on the cross-complaint. It is stipulated that the record filed in appeal No. 9005 may be used on all the appeals.

The complaint alleges that on April 6, 1916, the plaintiff and defendant executed an agreement whereby plaintiff agreed to sell and defendant agreed to buy a certain note and mortgage executed by Newark Realty & Development Company to said plaintiff and dated February 15, 1916, covering 2,186 acres of land in Alameda County, and the defendant agreed that on February 15, 1917, it would pay for said note and mortgage the sum of two hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars and all interest accrued thereon from February 15, 1916, to February 15, 1917, the note and mortgage to be transferred to the defendant upon payment by it to the plaintiff of said sum of money and interest. The agreement is awkwardly expressed but we have stated its legal effect. It is alleged that on March 1,1917, defendant paid twenty thousand dollars on the agreement, and that on October 3, 1917, plaintiff tendered the note and mortgage to the defendant, together with an assignment conveying to it all plaintiff’s title thereto, and demanded payment of the balance of the principal and interest under said agreement, which the defendant then refused to pay. The prayer was for judgment for two hundred and five thousand dollars with interest.

The defendant answered, setting up several defenses. Its first defense was that it had not executed the agreement sued *213 on. The second defense alleged that the defendant had paid forty-two thousand five hundred dollars on the agreement set forth in the complaint and that it was induced to execute the same by reason of certain false and fraudulent representations made by plaintiff to defendant. The third defense was that the defendant is a Canadian corporation, and that under its articles, and the laws of Canada governing it, it was without authority to purchase the said mortgage described in said agreement, and that any agreement executed by it purporting to agree to purchase the same was void for that reason. It also filed a cross-complaint wherein it alleged the same facts as are set forth in the answer, and in reliance thereon asked for a recovery of the forty-two thousand five hundred dollars alleged to have been paid upon said agreement, and for the cancellation thereof.

The court found that all the allegations relating to fraud were untrue. With regard to the execution of the agreement of April 6, 1916, it found that Stevenson, who was the president and attorney in fact of the defendant, on the one part, and the plaintiff, on the other part, “went through the form of making, delivering, and executing, as and for the contract of the” defendant, the said agreement. As to the power of the defendant to make the agreement, it found that it never at any time was authorized or empowered by law to enter into such contract; that it was not authorized by law to invest any of its funds in the purchase of mortgages where the amount paid therefor exceeded sixty per cent of the- value of the land covered by such mortgage; and that on April 6, 1916, the value of the land covered by the mortgage to be purchased under said agreement did not exceed $231,803.55. It also found that the defendant had, by mistake, paid forty-two thousand five hundred dollars upon the agreement; that the agreement was void; that the defendant was not guilty of laches and had done nothing whereby it was estopped to contend that the agreement was beyond its powers.

The judgment was that the plaintiff take nothing by her action; that the defendant take nothing by its cross-complaint, and that defendant recover of plaintiff its costs.

To authorize the defendant to invest two hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars on a real estate mortgage, the real estate should have been worth three hundred and seven *214 ty-five thousand dollars. If the theory of the court below that it could inquire into and revise the decision of the corporate authorities of the defendant as to the value of that land is correct, its conclusion that the defendant was not empowered to purchase said mortgage at that price is sustained by the facts; otherwise not, as we shall presently see.

Upon the trial it appeared that the denial of the alleged execution of the agreement of April 6, 1916, was based entirely on the theory that the execution of such a contract was not within the corporate powers of the defendant. The formal execution of the agreement was fully proven and found. The defense of the nonexecution of the contract, therefore, need not be considered, except as it may be connected with the defense that it was ultra vires.

The defendant is a corporation organized in Canada, under the laws of Canada. Those laws confer upon it power (a) “of loaning and of investment prescribed by the Insurance Act of 1910”; (b) to “constitute an investment board ... to have charge of the loaning and investment- of the funds of the society, . . . and to exercise such powers and under such regulations, . . . applicable thereto, as the society, or the executive council thereof, may from time to time determine”; (c) under the “Insurance Act of 1910,” to “invest its funds, or any portion thereof, in the purchase of . . . mortgages ... on real estate in Canada, or elsewhere where the company is carrying on its business, provided that the amount paid for any such mortgage . . . shall in no case exceed sixty per cent of the value of the real estate covered thereby”; and (d), under said act, to “loan its funds or any portion thereof on the security” of such mortgages, “provided, however, that no such loan shall exceed sixty per cent of the value of the real estate or interest therein which forms the security for such loan.”

The defendant corporation was, at all times- here involved, doing business in California. Consequently, its power to invest its money on the security' of mortgages on real estate extended to this state and included authority to buy mortgages on California real estate in order to invest its money on such security. The only limitation upon this power is found in the proviso “that the amount paid for any such *215 mortgage shall in no case exceed sixty per cent of the value of the real estate covered thereby.”

It appears from the uncontradicted evidence that Elliott G.

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Bluebook (online)
196 P. 41, 185 Cal. 211, 18 A.L.R. 639, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunne-v-independent-order-of-foresters-cal-1921.