Ellison v. Henion

190 P. 793, 183 Cal. 171, 11 A.L.R. 444, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 389
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 8552.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 190 P. 793 (Ellison v. Henion) 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
Ellison v. Henion, 190 P. 793, 183 Cal. 171, 11 A.L.R. 444, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 389 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a money judgment against him. The following facts appear without dispute:' The defendant and two men by the name of Pike were stockholders and officers of a corporation known as the Pike Woolen Company, and the defendant and one of the Pikes executed to the plaintiffs a joint guaranty of any indebtedness that the Woolen Company might incur to them. The Woolen Company did incur such an indebtedness in the sum of $4,436.81. Thereafter the Woolen Company became embarassed financially, and for the purpose off arranging its indebtedness executed two notes, one for six thousand dollars and one for seven thousand dollars, in favor of a representative of its creditors, including the plaintiffs. These notes represented the aggregate of the debts due the creditors, including the debt to the plaintiffs. The note for six thousand dollars was signed by the defendant’s coguarantor, Pike and his wife, as well as by the company, and, as security for its payment, Pike and his wife also executed a deed of trust of certain property of their own. The court finds, and we may assume that the finding is justified by the evidence, that the defendant consented to the plaintiffs taking these notes. Payments were made on the notes from time to time, but *173 finally the Woolen Company defaulted upon them, and the payee of the notes, the representative of the creditors, threatened to sell the property of the Pikes covered by the trust deed. Thereupon the Pikes, or one or the other of them, arranged with the payee of the notes for their purchase or return upon the payment of five thousand dollars. The defendant claims that the arrangement was for the purchase of the notes, and the plaintiffs claim that it was for the return of the notes to the Woolen Company. But. whatever may have been the negotiation between the Pikes and the payee, the thing that Was finally done was that, in consideration of five thousand dollars paid him, the payee of the notes indorsed them to one of the Pikes. The uncontradicted testimony also is that the notes remained outstanding as obligations of the Woolen Company, and that the five thousand dollars which was paid for the notes was obtained by Pike from a third person by a second hypothecation of his property. The five thousand dollars was distributed by the payee of the notes among the creditors whom he represented, in proportion to their claims. Including their share of this, the plaintiffs received on account of their claim against the Woolen Company a total of $2,174.03, leaving a balance of $2,262.78 on which they received nothing.

Under these circumstances the plaintiffs brought the present action against the defendant, the complaint containing two counts, one on the joint guaranty of the defendant and Pike for the recovery of the unpaid balance mentioned, and the other on the defendant’s liability for his proportion of that balance as a stockholder of the Woolen Company. The answer of the defendant pleaded payment of the obligation of the Woolen Company to the plaintiffs, and also set out as a separate defense the facts stated above with reference to the giving of the two notes, and their subsequent transfer to Pike. The trial court found that the original indebtedness of the Woolen Company to the plaintiffs had not been paid, and also, in effect, that the facts alleged as a separate defense were not true. This latter finding must have been an inadvertence, for the facts stated appear without conflict and for the most part in the testimony for the plaintiffs, as well as in that for the defendant. This finding must, therefore, be considered as not sustained by the evidence. The trial *174 court concluded that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover on both counts, and gave judgment to that effect.

It would seem to be quite evident that the plaintiffs cannot recover against the defendant as the guarantor of a debt of the Woolen Company, or as a stockholder of the company proportionately liable for its debt, if the plaintiffs had, before the commencement of their action, parted with the debt which is the basis of the action. The real question in the case is, had they so parted ?

No question is made but that the original debt of the Woolen Company to the plaintiffs was covered into the two notes given the representative of the creditors. There is question made as to whether the two notes were taken in payment. The question, however, would seem to be one largely as to the use of terms, since the fact is clear that the notes were simply taken in ordinary course for what had previously been open accounts. [1] It is well established that in such a case the indebtedness for which the notes are taken is not paid in the sense that it is absolutely discharged. If default be made upon the notes, an action can be maintained upon the original indebtedness, as if the notes had never been given.

[2] But, on the other hand, the notes evidence the debt and if they are transferred the debt is transferred with them, and the original creditor can thereafter maintain no action upon it. It no longer belongs to him. That the original debt for which a note has been taken passes with the transfer of the note, was directly decided in Goldman v. Murray, 164 Cal. 419, [129 Pac. 462], There the plaintiff brought an action to recover from the defendant as a stockholder of a certain corporation his proportion _ of a certain indebtedness of the corporation. It appeared that the corporation had been originally indebted for money advanced to it and gave its note to its creditor for the amount. The creditor then transferred the note to the plaintiff. The trial court found the note to be invalid as against the corporation, because of want of authority for its execution, but found that the original indebtedness of the corporation had been assigned by the original creditor to the plaintiff and granted a recovery upon it. ' On appeal, this finding of an assignment was attacked as not supported by the evidence. The only evidence on the point was that the note had been transferred to the plaintiff. It was held that this was enough, that the transfer of the *175 note was in fact a transfer of the original debt as between the original creditor and the plaintiff, although the note was void as to the corporation. If the transfer of a void note be in effect an assignment of the indebtedness which it was intended to evidence, much more must the transfer of a valid note be in effect an assignment of the indebtedness which it does in fact evidence. (See, also, 7 Cyc. 816; Harris v. Johnson, 7 U. S. (3 Cranch) 317, [2 L. Ed. 450]; Looney v. District of Columbia, 113 U. S. 258, [28 L. Ed. 974, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 463, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]; Davis v. Reilly, L. R. 1 Q. B. [1898] 1.)

In the present case there is no question as to the fact of the transfer of the notes taken for the indebtedness of the Woolen Company. They were, as we have said, indorsed and delivered to Pike by the payee, the representative of the Woolen Company’s creditors, upon the payment to him of five thousand dollars. The indorsements were special; that is, to the order of Pike. [3]

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Bluebook (online)
190 P. 793, 183 Cal. 171, 11 A.L.R. 444, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellison-v-henion-cal-1920.