Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Ziegler

259 P. 97, 85 Cal. App. 173
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 19, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5494.
StatusPublished

This text of 259 P. 97 (Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Ziegler) 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
Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Ziegler, 259 P. 97, 85 Cal. App. 173 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J., pro tem.

This is an action brought by

plaintiff to recover from defendants $11,500, together with interest and attorney’s fees, alleged to be due and owing on a certain promissory note and assigned to Farmers and Merchants National Bank by F. C. Trickey, the payee named in the note, which assignment is alleged to have been made before maturity and in the usual course of business. The complaint is in the usual form of an action on a promissory note. The answer denies that the note was assigned before maturity in the usual course of business, and alleges that the note has been fully satisfied and discharged. And as a *174 further and separate answer and defense, the defendants allege that by reason of the failure of F. C. Triekey, the payee in the note, to pay the rent for certain garage premises according to the terms of his lease, and his failure to keep the garage open day and night as a first-class garage, such lease and leasehold have been abandoned and the consideration of the note for $11,500 has wholly failed.

The defendants as owners, on or about December 1, 1921, leased to one Homer A. Brunell certain real property for a period- of approximately nine years at a rental running from $160 per month to $210 per month for the last five years of the lease, upon which property Brunell conducted a garage; the lease by its terms was assignable without the ■necessity of the owner’s consent; thereafter, on or about December 6, 1921, the lease, together with the machinery and equipment contained in the garage, were acquired by F. C. Triekey; on December 23, 1921, F. C. Triekey sold to defendant George J. Ziegler his interest in the Brunell lease, together with the equipment, for a consideration of $11,500, the transaction being consummated by defendants George J. Ziegler and Clara B. Ziegler, his wife, and F. C. Triekey in the following manner: George J. Ziegler, Clara B. Ziegler, and F. C. Triekey, on December 23, 1921, went to the plaintiff bank; there Mr. Lemmon, an officer of the bank, at their request made out a promissory note in the sum of $11,500, payable to F. C. Triekey on or before one year after date, without interest, which was signed by the defendants George J. Ziegler and Clara B. Ziegler, and delivered to F. C. Triekey, who thereupon indorsed the note and placed it with the plaintiff bank for collection, and as collateral security for such note there was left with the bank an assignment of the Brunell lease and a bill of sale of the equipment of the garage, to be delivered to the Zieglers upon payment of the note. Immediately thereafter defendants, for a rental of $300 per month, leased the garage premises and the equipment therein contained to Triekey for the period of one year. The day following the execution and delivery of the note and consummation of the transaction at the bank, according to the. testimony of Triekey, he, Triekey, went to Ziegler’s place of business, and there signed a brief agreement to keep the garage open day and night for the period of one year, for which period he had leased the premises *175 from the Zieglers. According to the findings of the trial court, and which find support in the evidence, it was never the intention of the parties that this agreement should in any way be connected with the payment of the $11,500 promissory note.

Prior to December 23, 1921, F. C. Trickey had borrowed from the plaintiff bank $5,000 for the purpose of acquiring the Brunell lease on the garage premises and the garage equipment. On January 26, 1922, Trickey assigned and transferred the Zieglers note, then being held for collection, to the plaintiff bank as security for his indebtedness to the bank, which at that time had been reduced to the sum of $4,000, and afterward, on February 3, 1922, reduced to $3,000, and at the time of the trial of this action this amount was wholly unpaid. This note for $11,500 executed by defendants is the note sued on here.

Appellant urges as grounds for reversal of the judgment the following assignments: (1) That the finding that the note was indorsed to plaintiff before maturity and without notice of defendants’ defense against the payee is not supported by the evidence; (2) That the uncontradicted evidence shows defendants have a defense as against the payee of said note; (3) That the breach of the terms of defendants’ exhibit “A” (agreement to keep the business open day and night) on the part of the payee is a defense to the note as against plaintiff; (4) That the evidence shows that it was the intent of the maker and payee of said note that said note was evidence of payment to be made by defendants only in the event payee performed the terms of the contemporaneous agreement and was not intended to be negotiable; (5) That plaintiff should not recover more than the amount unpaid on the Trickey note.

Appellants’ defense as against Trickey, the payee, as gleaned from their answer is that, as a result of Trickey’s alleged breach of the agreement to keep the garage open day and night and his failure to pay rent under his one-year lease, the consideration for the promissory note sued upon has wholly failed and the property described in the bill of sale and the lease have become valueless. The court on this issue specially found “it is not true that the consideration for said note for Eleven Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($11,500.00) has wholly, or at all failed; nor is it true that *176 the property or lease described in said bill of sale have become valueless. On the contrary, the court finds that the fair rental value of said premises on December - 22, 1921, was at least Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00) a month, and at the date of the trial was at least Four Hundred Dollars ($400.00) a month; that the rental paid under the Brunell lease was substantially less than the amounts aforesaid; that one of the purposes of the sale of said lease, garage business and equipment, was the acquisition by the Zieglers of the Brunell lease and the attendant right of leasing the premises for a rental in excess of the rental therein provided for; that after such acquisition by the sale aforesaid, said Zieglers did rent the premises to one Lamb for a period of five years at a rental in excess of the amount required to be paid for the like period under the Brunell lease. There was no testimony offered by the defendants that the tools or equipment constituting a part of the subject matter of the sale by Trickey to Ziegler, was of no value, hence the court finds that the allegation to that effect is not true.”

Appellants have not directed our attention to any testimony, nor have we found any in the record, as to the value or lack of value, of the tools or equipment. As to the finding that the consideration for the note has not wholly or at all failed—that the lease is of greater value than it was when the lease and tools and equipment were purchased by appellants from Trickey, there is ample evidence in the record to support such finding. The witness W. W. Scott, a real estate broker, who had been engaged in the business of rentals, leases, and general real estate in Los Angeles since 1911, testified that the garage ought to be worth around $400 or $450 a month and that the rental value would be" four times what it was in 1921, and the property was leased on October 24, 1922, during the one-year term of the Trickey lease by Mrs. Ziegler to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
259 P. 97, 85 Cal. App. 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-national-bank-v-ziegler-calctapp-1927.