Fairchild v. Cartwright

178 P. 333, 39 Cal. App. 118, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 10
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1867.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 178 P. 333 (Fairchild v. Cartwright) 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
Fairchild v. Cartwright, 178 P. 333, 39 Cal. App. 118, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 10 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the superior court of the county of Sacramento, sitting without a jury, in favor of plaintiff and respondent for the sum of two thousand one hundred dollars, with interest from June 1,1913, at the rate of seven per cent per annum, amounting to $502.25, and for costs in the sum of $42.

Appellant specifies as causes for said appeal that the evidence adduced at said trial does not justify the said findings of fact and conclusions of law in four particulars, namely:

*119 1.' That said alleged agreement to pay is in contravention of the statute of frauds; 2. That said alleged agreement to pay is without consideration, and void; 3. That said alleged agreement to pay was canceled and rescinded by mutual consent of the parties thereto; and 4. That defendant’s counterclaim should have been allowed in full.

A brief summary of the salient facts will suffice to show the nature of the controversy. It appears generally that an insurance corporation, known as the Pacific National Fire Insurance Company, was organized, having as an adjunct another corporation, called the Pacific States Holding Company. While the relation of these two companies does not very clearly appear from the record, it is reasonable to assume from the evidence that the purpose of the former corporation was the transaction of a general fire insurance business, while the function of the latter, as evidenced by its name, was the holding and handling of the corporate shares of the Fire Insurance Company.

Preliminarily, we may say that plaintiff sustained certain relations to said Pacific States Holding Company, either as its agent or employee, but such relations are not clearly indicated in the record. He further appears from the evidence to have been a promoter, stock salesman, and broker of corporate securities, and at various times engaged in interesting investors in the purchase of such collateral. Indeed, his resourcefulness in such capacity is evidenced from the correspondence with the defendant, wherein he communicates the various “deals” he is on the verge of consummating and, possibly, might have succeeded in effecting but for the failure to receive from defendant the unpaid balance, sued upon and made the basis of this action. However, no claim is made for such remote and speculative profits.

We may add that defendant, during the years 1912 and 1913, was president and director of said Pacific National Fire Insurance Company, and it is admitted by appellant in his brief that the parent corporation and its holding company had some business relations. It also appears from the evidence that said defendant was a man well and favorably known in state and financial circles, and that he intended to lend his recognized ability and financial resources to quite an extent in the promotion, and we may easily infer, to the salva *120 tion of the Insurance Company’s affairs, which were threatened with disaster. In the early part of defendant’s administration of the affairs of the Insurance Copipany the prospects seemed roseate and alluring, and in his exuberant expectation of success, appellant resolved to make the business of the company his life work. At this time he ivas apparently willing to become personally responsible for the payment of plaintiff’s claim. Afterward, as the business declined, his attitude toward plaintiff’s claim naturally changed.

There is sufficient evidence in the record to justify the conclusion that respondent had a contract with the Holding Company for the payment of a large sum of money, which the directors of the Insurance Company considered themselves obligated to pay; that it was agreed that this contract should be rescinded and said directors would give respondent a written contract for the payment of some seven thousand dollars and guaranteeing him the privilege of selling for many years the stock of the company on a percentage basis; that the said directors declined to carry out their agreement and respondent insisted that his old agreement was still in force; that to compromise and settle this claim appellant promised to pay respondent the sum of six thousand dollars, three thousand dollars down, and the balance in sixty or ninety days, and that respondent accepted the agreement in satisfaction of all claims against the company or its directors.

There can be no doubt as to the sufficiency of the showing that appellant promised to be primarily responsible for the payment of said sum. Mr. Clarence E. Peters, an attorney at law, and apparently a disinterested witness, testified that he was present when the matter was discussed by the parties, and “Senator Cartwright said that he had been up in Humboldt County soliciting stock subscriptions for the company, and that in exchange for stock subscriptions he had taken a number of promissory notes in payment of stock, but that these notes would not be paid until fall or about the first of November and that some time in November, or early, or before the middle of November, the money would come in, the money owed him, he would then receive it and he would pay Mr. Fairchild in November, which was about six or seven weeks subsequent to the time. ... He said that he had invested his entire private fortune, in the sum of about eighty thousand dollars, in the company; that he was president of the com *121 pany, and desired to see it a success, and that he was giving it his entire attention and intended to make it his life work. . . . He said that he was under no legal obligation to the company to pay this debt, but he desired to see the company a success, therefore he had personally assumed the obligation to pay Mr. Fairchild, and desired to see it paid. ’ ’ It may be added that plaintiff testified that defendant promised unequivocally to pay the money.

As to the law of the ease there would seem to be no obstacle to the enforcement of the contract. The appellant wanted to avoid trouble, lawsuits, and unenviable notoriety in reference to the company in which he had such an interest, and the consideration was therefore beneficial to him. (Burr v. Cross, 3 Cal. App. 416, [86 Pac. 424].) The compromise of even a doubtful right is a sufficient foundation for a promise to pay money. (Gardner v. Watson, 170 Cal. 575, [150 Pac. 994].)

Where there is a valid consideration the law will not attempt to measure the amount thereof. (Whelan v. Swain, 132 Cal. 389, [64 Pac. 560].)

The credit of a corporation, especially one dealing in matters of such public concern as fire insurance, is exceedingly sensitive to criticism of its management and is likely to be greatly affected by the exposition of the inner secrets of its creation, such as the agreement among the directors and promoters to collect and divide among themselves a large portion of the amount subscribed by the stockholders, and it may be that appellant had this in mind when he promised to pay six thousand dollars for an asserted claim of some twenty thousand dollars. At any rate, there was sufficient consideration to support the promise.

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178 P. 333, 39 Cal. App. 118, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairchild-v-cartwright-calctapp-1918.