Flanagan v. Brown

11 P. 706, 70 Cal. 254, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 777
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1886
DocketNo. 11164
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 11 P. 706 (Flanagan v. Brown) 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
Flanagan v. Brown, 11 P. 706, 70 Cal. 254, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 777 (Cal. 1886).

Opinion

Searls, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of defendant, and from an order denying a new trial.

We are of opinion the judgment and order should be affirmed, for the reasons given by the learned judge who decided the case in the court below on the rendition of 'judgment, and which are as follows:—

“This is an action on a promissory note for twenty-seven thousand dollars, executed by defendant September 4, 1876, payable four months after date, and bearing [256]*256interest at ten per cent per annum from maturity. The original holder of the note was the National Bank of the State of Missouri.
“At a sale of the assets of said bank, J. F. Conroy became the purchaser of the note in suit, paying therefor the sum of thirty-two dollars. Subsequently Conroy and the present plaintiff entered into an agreement reciting that, whereas Flanagan was the owner of thirty bonds of the St. Louis County Railroad, and Theodore W. Gaty (whose name was used for Conroy’s) was the owner of the note in suit for twenty-seven thousand dollars, it was agreed that Gaty should place his note in the hands of Flanagan, so as to enable him to manage, transfer, or dispose of said bonds and said note. The agreement concludes in these words: ‘All proceeds, money, or property realized from the transaction, after payment of expenses, shall be equally divided between the parties, but in no event shall said note be sold or disposed of for a sum of money or other property whereby a net sum shall be realized by said Gaty of less than $250.’
“The action was commenced by Flanagan alone. Pending the action, the defendant, after some negotiation, obtained from Conroy a release, which by supplemental answer is set up as a bar to this action.
“The question to be determined is, Does this release from Conroy bar plaintiff’s right of recovery? Defendant claims that Flanagan was a mere agent, whose authority was revocable at the pleasure of Conroy, his principal, and that Flanagan had no such right in the matter as would defeat Conroy’s control of the property and his release of any claim thereon. Plaintiff claims that he is the owner of the legal title, and also of a one-half interest in the proceeds of the note.
“ If plaintiff is the legal owner of the note, the ownership is not evidenced by the agreement hereinbefore referred to. No language of transfer or assignment is found therein. It does not appear therefrom that Con[257]*257roy was parting with the ownership, or vesting the title in Flanagan. On the contrary, it appears that the note is referred to as Conroy's note, which is placed in Flanagan's hands to enable him to manage, transfer, or dispose of the same. This is language creating an agency. That it intended to create and does create an agency is not negatived by the fact that the subject of the agency is a promissory note rather than some other species of personal property. It seems to me that the mere temporary custody which a collector has of a promissory note indorsed in blank does not place him in a position to dispute as against his employer the question of ownership. Nor is he in a position to say to the party liable on the note that a release obtained from the real and sole owner is not valid to defeat a recovery by the mere agent, who happens to be the custodian of the paper.
“The mere manual holding of the paper would give no right of action to a thief who might sue upon it. The entire destruction or loss of the paper would not bar a recovery by the real, owner. The physical custody of the paper is a false element in the controversy to determine ownership as between a principal and his agent. It may be that it cuts a controlling figure as between the agent and the maker of the note when no question is made of the agent's right to represent and act for the owner. When the agent holds a note indorsed in blank, and sues upon it in behalf of his principal, it is no defense for the maker to say that the plaintiff in the suit is not the owner, and this, as I understand it, is all that is really decided in the case of Curtiss v. Sprague,. 51 Cal. 241. There the defendant applied for a nonsuit, and the Supreme Court held that it was not error to deny the motion; and held further that it was error to join as plaintiff one who had assigned the note with the understanding that he should have half of the amount recovered. The agreement under which the note in suit was delivered to Curtiss, the plaintiff, was that he should bring [258]*258the suit, and divide the proceeds with his assignor. That case involved only a question of proper parties and pleadings; it did not deal with any question of release by the real owner of the claim in suit.
“In my judgment, that case is not to any extent determinative of the rights of the parties here. The agreement here says nothing of the right of Flanagan to bring any suit upon the note, nor of his right to control such suit when brought.
“Far less does the agreement divest the principal of the absolute ownership of the obligation represented by the paper. Flanagan’s custody of that paper determines nothing as against Conroy’s ownership of it, or the efficacy of Conroy’s release of any obligation represented by it.
“If Flanagan has any standing, it must result from something else than his mere custody of the paper; he is not the owner of it; he is a mere agent intrusted with its custody; was he such an agent that his principal had not the right to revoke his authority ?
“ His authority was defined and limited by the agreement signed by the parties. Article 6 of chapter 1 of title 9 of the Civil Code treats of the termination of agency. Section 2356 of that article is as follows: ‘ Unless the power of an agent is coupled with an interest in the subject of the agency, it is terminated as to every person having notice thereof by,—1. Its revocation by the principal.’
“ This language is not as broad as that found in some of the text-books which define the extent of the principal’s right of revocation of the agent’s authority. It does not include, as do many of the books, an agency given for a valuable consideration as one whose power is irrevocable. It makes use of language- frequently found and construed in the text-books, and omits a portion of the limitations set on revocability. It seems to limit the principal’s power of revocation to cases when [259]*259his agent is vested by his principal with an interest in the property itself which is the subject of the agency. The term ‘ power coupled with an interest ’ is well understood, and is discussed and defined in the very cases cited by the code commissioners under the section above referred to. These cases lay down the rule that a power coupled with an interest is where the grantee has an interest in the estate as well as in the exercise of the power. It is determined to exist or not accordingly as the agent is found to have such estate or not before the execution of the power. If his interest is only a right to share the proceeds which result from the execution of his power, the agent has not a power coupled with an interest.
“ The case of Brown v. Pforr, 38 Cal. 550, recognizes the rule as to power coupled with an interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 P. 706, 70 Cal. 254, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanagan-v-brown-cal-1886.