Figari v. Olcese

195 P. 425, 184 Cal. 775
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9219.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 195 P. 425 (Figari v. Olcese) 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
Figari v. Olcese, 195 P. 425, 184 Cal. 775 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

THE COURT

Plaintiff brought this action to recover on a promissory note purporting to have been executed by the defendants.

The question here presented is whether the respondent, Emilio Olcese, signed the note as a maker, or merely as a witness to the signature of his eodefendant, G. B. Olcese.

The trial court found that respondent signed the instrument only as a witness.

*776 The appeal is from the judgment in respondent’s favor, and is based upon the contention that the above finding is not supported by the evidence.

The instrument,. as reproduced in the record, shows the names of both defendants in the usual place of signature by the makers of a promissory note. The name of respondent, Emilio Olcese, is directly under that of his codefendant, an admitted maker of the note. The only distinguishing feature is that the word “witness” appears immediately in front of respondent’s signature.

The undisputed facts are that the plaintiff, Figari, loaned one thousand three hundred dollars to the defendant, G-. B. Olcese, and received this note as evidence of the indebtedness. The defendant, Emilio Olcese, is the son of the other defendant, and at the time of this transaction was twenty-six years old and was in the employment of his father in the latter’s grocery-store, and had no personal interest in and received no part of the borrowed money.

Figari was about fifty-six years of age and an Italian. Both he and the elder Olcese had an imperfect knowledge of English. The plaintiff was unable to read or write the English language.

Although the testimony is conflicting on the point at issue, plaintiff’s testimony is that he had been given to understand by the elder Olcese that the note was to be signed by both the father and son and that he accepted the note in the ■belief that both had signed it as makers and did not know that Emilio Olcese had written the word “witness” before his name until many months after the note was executed. The two principals, Figari and Olcese, went to a notary and had the note drawn up. It does not appear clearly whether the elder Olcese signed it at the notary’s office or later. At any rate, the deal was not closed there, but the parties met the next morning at the office of Olcese over his store, at which time and place Figari produced his money to complete the loan. It is at this point that the matter in controversy arises as to Emilio Olcese’s relation to the transaction. Figari says that he went the next morning to get the note. He testifies: “Emilio, the son, gave me the note.” “I say, ‘I want to see you put your name.’ He say, ‘I put it all ready.’ I say, ‘I like to see it. Some time I can’t read, I like to see you put your name.’ He told his father, *777 ‘He wants me to put my name again,’ and the father say, ‘Yes, put it again.’ ” He further testified in this connection that the son then took the pen and retraced his name and handed him the note. There was other testimony of Figari indicating that it was agreed between him and the elder Olcese that the son, and perhaps the wife, was to join in signing the note. At any rate, it is enough to say, from plaintiff’s standpoint, that Figari’s testimony, standing uncontradicted, would sufficiently establish Emilio’s liability as a maker of the note, and had the trial court found accordingly such finding might well be held conclusive.

Both the father and the son, however, dispute this version of the transaction. On this controverted point the testimony of the elder Olcese, in substance, is as follows: “My son was present when the money was delivered. He was outside of the store, and I told my son, Mr. Figari told me, ‘ I would like to see your son and I give you the money, ’ so I called Emilio to come up and Emilio came up and Mr. Figari looked at the money and he told me, ‘Now, you got the money here,’ and he say, ‘Your son can sign.’ He says, ‘You have your son sign this note to see I give you the money.’ ” “Well, my son was there and I told him myself to sign the note.” Q. “But you have just stated that Mr. Figari said to you in your son’s presence to have your son sign as a witness.” A. “Mr. Figari told me, and he said he was telling me. He told me first, my son was not present and I called him up and I told him to come up to the office. . . . Mr. Figari came to my office and counted the money and put it on the desk, and after he got the money counted and before I took the money he asked me, ‘We are here alone and I give you the money.’ He would like to have somebody see that I give you the money, and he says, ‘Is your son downstairs?’ and I said, ‘Yes,’ and called my son up, and I says, ‘I got some money here and I would like to have you come up,’ and I told him—he don’t know Figari, I told my son, ‘I got some money and I show it and he loan some money and I want you to come up and see the man lend the money.’ Mr. Figari was present.” Q. “Did you hear your son testify here a little while ago that Mr. Figari was not present, that he was on the outside?” Mr. Kelly: “That is not the testimony. The testimony of both witnesses is to the effect that Mr. Olcese went outside *778 and called Emilio and brought him into the room where the money was and had Emilio sign the paper in the presence of both of them.” The Court: “That is the testimony.” Q. “At what particular place did you ask your son Emilio to come and sign the note?” A. “Right there in front of the money, in my office. ... In the presence of Mr. Figari I asked my son to sign the note to witness, so Figari says, so Figari could see him loan me the money, and my son sign as a witness, and Mr. Figari turned around, and he didn’t see my son do the writing and he said to my son, ‘I like to see you sign. I like to see you sign your name- next, ’ and my son says, ‘Yes, I have signed that.’ Mr. Figari never say nothing about a witness, he never mentioned anything about seeing the money turned over and like to see him sign, like a witness. And he never say anything else. My son don’t have anything to do with the business.”

This testimony is confusing and perhaps contradictory, but there is nothing in it to indicate that Emilio Olcese had any intimation from either his father or the plaintiff that he was signing other than as a witness. It would appear from the testimony of this witness that Figari had no conversation with Emilio as to the capacity in which he was to sign the note; that his communication in that regard was entirely with the father, but that the statement was made to the son in Figari’s presence that he was asked to sign as a witness.

The respondent’s own testimony on this point is more explicit. His testimony in substance is as follows: ‘ ‘ The first time I saw Mr. Figari to know him was when I signed the note. I knew nothing about the negotiation of the note. I saw the money delivered to G. B. Olcese. . . . Mr. G. B. Olcese came outside, and I saw him; he was borrowing some money from Mr. Figari. Mr. Figari was upstairs in the office and he wanted me to sign the' note as a witness. Mr. G. B. Olcese asked me to sign the note as a witness that he took the money. I was outside handling potatoes and stuff and Mr. Olcese asked me to sign the note, as a witness. I ¡believe the note was signed by my father when I signed it. I signed right under his name. I saw him sign it. He signed first and I signed afterward. Mr. Figari was there, right between me and my father.

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195 P. 425, 184 Cal. 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/figari-v-olcese-cal-1921.