Dyer v. Minturn

189 P. 1046, 47 Cal. App. 1, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 452
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3045.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 189 P. 1046 (Dyer v. Minturn) 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
Dyer v. Minturn, 189 P. 1046, 47 Cal. App. 1, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 452 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by defendants from a judgment rendered in plaintiff’s favor for the sum of $892.01, in an action instituted by plaintiff against the representatives of the estate of James W. Minturn, deceased, for the purpose of establishing the validity of a rejected claim presented against said estate by plaintiff for a balance claimed to be due upon a mutual, open, and current account. *3 Minturn died on May 27, 1917. Defendants deny the indebtedness, aver payment, and plead the statute of limitations.

The question of the application of the statute of limitations depends upon the character of the account sued upon. If, as plaintiff avers, a “mutual, open, and current account” has been shown, the action is not barred by the statute, for the reason that suit was commenced within four years from the date of the last item of the account. (Subd. 2, sees. 337 and 344, Code Civ. Proc.) Appellants claim that no mutual, open, and -current account has been shown. In this respect it is -contended that the account sued upon lacks mutuality and reciprocal demands and is merely a statement showing payments advanced by plaintiff to third persons for and on behalf of plaintiff and said Minturn, for which suit should have been brought within two years from the date of the last item stated therein. (Subd. 1, sec. 339, Code Civ. Proc.)

[1] From the evidence it is made to appear that plaintiff and the deceased, Minturn, purchased jointly and paid for in installments certain residence property in Fresno, which they remodeled and afterward used as their home. Both plaintiff and deceased advanced money to pay for labor and materials in the renovation of the dwelling, and each kept a book of account in which entries of such payments were made. The account sued upon, which is set forth in the rejected claim, was taken by plaintiff from plaintiff’s books. Upon its face it shows the various entries of debit and credit in separate columns. The debit column represents the payments made by plaintiff to persons who - performed work and furnished materials in the improvement and repair of said residence, and covers a period from September 30, 1912, to January 4, 1914, and also represents the payments made by plaintiff on the land, and the interest on deferred payments, from October 7, 1914, to and including November 13, 1916. The credit column shows the payments made by Minturn to persons performing work and furnishing materials for said residence, and also the payments by him on the land, and the interest on deferred payments. Upon its face the account appears to have been balanced, and shows that plaintiff expended $10,866.51 more than Minturn, and that one-half thereof, to wit, $5,433.25, *4 was charged to Minturn, of which Minturn had paid $4,500, leaving a balance due in favor of plaintiff of $933.26. In other words, on the one side of the account are shown the different items furnished and amounts paid by plaintiff for the joint benefit of himself and Minturn, and on the other side are shown the different items furnished and amounts paid by Minturn for like purposes, and a balance is shown in favor of plaintiff. From the face of the account it appears that the items constitute mutual credits founded on an implied agreement for the setoff of mutual debts; that the parties dealt with each other in the same relation, and the items of the account are capable of being set off against each other. The credit items do not consist of money payments from one to the other, but are made up of demands of a reciprocal character, and the account was permitted to run with a view of ultimate adjustment by the settlement and the payment by one to the other of the balance. Such an account possesses all the elements necessary to constitute a “mutual” account, and it must be so held. (Millet v. Bradbury, 109 Cal. 170, [41 Pac. 865]; Fraylor v. Sonora Min. Co., 17 Cal. 594; Norton v. Larco, 30 Cal. 126, [89 Am. Dec. 70]; Flynn v. Seale, 2 Cal. App. 665, [84 Pac. 263].) Suit was commenced on the account within four years from the date of the last item thereof, and therefore plaintiff’s action was not barred by the statute.

[2] Appellants’ second point is that the court erred in admitting evidence in violation of the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 1880 .of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that parties or assignors of parties to an action or proceeding, .the persons in whose behalf an action or proceeding is prosecuted, against an executor or administrator upon a claim or demand against an estate of a deceased person, cannot testify as to any matter or fact occurring before the death of such deceased person. The instance first complained of is where plaintiff, having been called as a witness in his own behalf, was handed the rejected claim, which had been admitted in evidence without objection, and testified that with the exception of one item thereof, amounting to $41.25, the rejected claim was a correct statement of the account as shown by his boobs. It is claimed by appellants that this testimony was admitted contrary to the rule stated in Colburn v. Parrett, 27 Cal. App. *5 541, [150 Pac. 786], and the authorities therein cited, which hold that while a plaintiff himself may by his own testimony establish the fact that he kept books of account at a stated time, and that the books produced were the ones kept by him, he may not testify as to the correctness of said books, nor that the entries therein made are true and correct, for the reason that the giving of such testimony by a plaintiff would, in effect, be allowing the plaintiff to testify that he rendered to the deceased the services, or furnished the materials, or delivered the goods, etc., as the case may be, which the entries represent. But the testimony of plaintiff in the instant case did not extend that far. Plaintiff did not testify as to the correctness of his books of account, nor to the correctness of the account embodied in the rejected claim. He merely testified that the account embodied in the rejected claim was correct as shown by his boohs of account. In other words, he testified in effect that the account embodied in the rejected claim was a correct reproduction of the account shown by his books; that it did not vary or differ from the account shown by his books. That the trial court so understood the testimony and was guarding carefully against a violation of the provisions of said section 1880 is clearly shown by the court’s ruling, made immediately following the admission of this evidence, wherein the court ordered stricken out the affirmative answer given by plaintiff in response to a question asked by plaintiff’s counsel, to wit: “And is a true account of your dealings with Mr. Minturn?” and by the court’s effort to clarify the record by asking the question: “The question was simply whether your books show that [claim] to be correct, and you have stated in regard to one item that you waive that. Now otherwise your answer would be that the books do show it?” To which the plaintiff replied, “Yes, sir.” It may be conceded that if plaintiff had been allowed to testify that his boobs or the account as set forth in the rejected claim were correct it probably would have constituted error.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 1046, 47 Cal. App. 1, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-minturn-calctapp-1920.