First Nat'l Bank of Covina v. Ruddock Co.

111 P. 86, 158 Cal. 334, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 374
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1910
DocketL.A. No. 2430.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 P. 86 (First Nat'l Bank of Covina v. Ruddock Co.) 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
First Nat'l Bank of Covina v. Ruddock Co., 111 P. 86, 158 Cal. 334, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 374 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

Plaintiff, as assignee of a body constituting the Citizens’ Right of Way Committee of the city of Covina, brought this action against the defendant Charles H. Ruddock to recover on two promissory notes executed by him to the committee and recovered judgment thereon, and from said judgment and a denial of his motion for a new trial, said Ruddock appeals.

It appears that a large number of persons whose property and personal interests in and about the city of Covina would be benefited and advanced by the construction of an electric road which would connect the city of Los Angeles with the city of Covina, appointed a committee whose duty it should be to obtain the construction of such a line, and to that end secure the necessary funds and procure a right of way over which the said electric road to Covina should be constructed.

The defendant Ruddock, along with many others, executed notes to the treasurer of the committee to defray the expense of such right of way, the main inducement for their execution being the benefits which would accrue to their lands by reason of the construction and operation of an electric road between the two cities.

Ruddock, in aid of such purpose, executed the two notes sued on, one of which is as follows:—

“Covina, Cal., March 25th, 1903.
“For value received I promise to pay upon demand to F. M. Douglass of the Citizens’ Right of Way Committee, the sum of $3097.75 to defray the cost of securing the right of way for the Covina extension of the Pacific Electric Railway.
“Ruddock Company,
“By C. H. Ruddock.”

The other note was similar in tenor to the first but for the sum of $2377.50 and dated April 28, 1903.

The proceeds of all the notes secured by the committee were to constitute a fund to procure a right of way which when procured, was to be given free to the railroad company con *336 structing said railroad as soon as an electric railway should be constructed and put into operation between said cities of Los Angeles and Covina.

Within the time agreed on for the construction of the said road the committee procured that portion of the right of way necessary to be procured by them, which was between Vineland and Covina, and through their efforts a corporation known as the Los Angeles Interurban Railway Company constructed an electric road of modern design and with modern appliances and equipment and operated by electricity, which, since its construction, has been continuously operated by the Pacific Electric Railway Company, over the right of way procured by the said committee, and from said city of Los Angeles through Vineland to the city of Covina.

The notes executed by Ruddock were assigned to plaintiff and the former having failed to make payment on demand this action was brought to recover on them.

While the notes are signed by the Ruddock Company by C. H. Ruddock, they were so signed because at the time of the signing a corporation to be composed of the members of the Ruddock family owning lands in the vicinity of the contemplated extension of the electric road was under contemplation. The formation of this corporation was abandoned and it is conceded by the defendant appellant that if any liability on the notes exists he is personally liable thereon. Several defenses were interposed by the defendant, all of which were held untenable by the trial court, and in this it is insisted that the court erred.

The first defense interposed by him was that by the terms of his subscription notes his payments were to be in aid of the extension of an electric road to Covina to be constructed by the Pacific Electric Railway, which meant the Pacific Electric Railway Company, which was then an organized corporation engaged in the construction of an extended system of railways radiating from the city of Los Angeles, and which, when the note was signed" had an electric line operating from Los Angeles to San Gabriel, from which point appellant claims “the Covina extension" was to be made. It is insisted, first, that his subscription being made in relation to an extension by a specified railroad—the Pacific Electric Railway Company—without any provision for its successors or assigns—the acceptance *337 of the subscription and the performance of the conditions by the company which constructed the road, namely, the Los Angeles Interurban Company, does not bind the defendant as subscriber unless he consented to them which he did not, and second, that the extension was not built from San Gabriel to Covina as agreed.

As far as the point is made that a particular extension of the route from San Gabriel to Covina was stipulated for it is apparent that the subscription notes had no reference to any route at all. It is undoubtedly true that when the subject of connecting the city of Covina with Los Angeles, a distance of nineteen miles, was first agitated, the residents of Covina and vicinity had in contemplation an extension of the electric road then operated by the Pacific Electric Railway Company as far as San Gabriel, and contemplated an extension from the latter place through Covina and beyond, including possibly Pomona and Riverside. But in the subscription notes there is nothing specifically requiring that any particular extension route shall be taken. As far as the right of way committee and the residents in the vicinity of Covina, in whose behalf and their own the committee was acting, no definite action was taken at all as far as selecting a route is concerned, until after these subscription notes were secured. It is quite apparent from the evidence in the case that what the Covina people wanted was an electric road which would put them in communication with the city of Los Angeles, and at the time the notes were secured by the committee, of which the defendant was a member, no route had been fixed upon or any arrangement made with any company relative to any definite route. In fact, until the route was finally selected upon which the electric ■ road was built, several routes were under contemplation. It was realized that the selection of a route, if an electric company could be prevailed on to build at all, would be a matter to be taken up with the constructing company and the route to be selected would be left largely, if not entirely, to that company. So these matters were left entirely to the right of way committee. When the committee consulted with Mr. II. E. Huntington, president of the Pacific Electric Railway Company, he assured them that he would build an electric road to Covina if he was given a free right of way. No assurances were made by him as to what route would be followed. The matter was for ar *338 rangement between, the committee and Mr. Huntington. The latter did not make the offer as representing the Pacific Electric Railway Company of which he was president or the Los Angeles Railway Company of which he was also president. It did not purport to be the offer of any company, but of Mr. Huntington personally. All that the residents of Covina were solicitous about—referring now more particularly to those who signed subscription notes—was that there should be constructed a direct electric line between Los Angeles and Covina.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 P. 86, 158 Cal. 334, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-natl-bank-of-covina-v-ruddock-co-cal-1910.