Gift v. Ahrnke

237 P.2d 706, 107 Cal. App. 2d 614, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1953
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 1951
DocketCiv. 14731
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 237 P.2d 706 (Gift v. Ahrnke) 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
Gift v. Ahrnke, 237 P.2d 706, 107 Cal. App. 2d 614, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1953 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

WOOD (Fred B.), J.

Defendants Albert L. Hammill and Hans P. Ahrnke were partners engaged in the general security brokerage business under the name of Hammill and Company. Defendant American Bonding Company of Baltimore, a corporation, was surety on the bond of Hammill and Company as a broker licensed under the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act. Plaintiff May W. Gift was a customer of and maintained a securities account with Ham-mill and Company.

Judgment was rendered for plaintiff for $4,000 against Ahrnke, Hammill and the American Bonding Company, and for $13,547.66 against Ahrnke and Hammill. Ahrnke and the bonding company have appealed. Hammill has not.

The Four Thousand Dollar Award

April 11, 1947, Hammill and Company sold for respondent certain of her shares of stock and credited the net proceeds of the sale, $4,534.69, to her securities account as a free credit balance. About May 15, 1947, she was paid $400 of this sum and $4,000 was transferred from her account to Hammill ?s personal account with Hammill and Company. About July 16,1947, she received a promissory note in the principal sum of $4,000, bearing interest at 5 per cent, payable to her, signed by Hammill, as maker, in his individual capacity.

The trial court found that the $4,000 was wrongfully and fraudulently appropriated by Hammill without the knowledge or consent of respondent; that the substitution of Hammill’s personal obligation was without her authorization; that she was deceived by the misrepresentations of Hammill and, relying upon those misrepresentations, she thought and understood that her funds were safely invested by and with Hammill and Company; that said purported substitution was fraudulent and a misappropriation of funds received by the partnership in the course and scope of its business, a breach of its fiduciary obligation, and void and of no effect; that ever since April 11, 1947, Hammill and Company, Ham-mill, and Ahrnke and each of them had been indebted to respondent in the sum of $4,000, representing said free credit balance, and that each of them had neither honestly nor faithfully applied the funds received and had not performed their obligations and undertakings in the purchase and sale of *617 securities. Judgment for $4,000 was rendered against Ham-mill, Ahrnke, and American Bonding Company, jointly and severally. In support of their claim that these findings are not supported by the evidence, appellants direct attention to some of the testimony of respondent which tends to conflict with other testimony given by her, a conflict that was resolved against appellants by the trial court. Respondent was a widow in her sixties; had no business training or experience; depended upon the income from her securities for her livelihood; had recently suffered from a mental condition and received shock treatments therefor; placed trust and confidence in Hammill, and had always accepted his advice concerning the sale of her securities and the investment of the proceeds of sale. These facts were well known to Hammill, who had handled her investments since 1937 and was thoroughly familiar with her financial affairs. She testified that she never authorized the transfer of the $4,000 from her credit balance to Hammill’s personal account; had no recollection of his requesting a loan; did not recall receiving the note; and that when she first received the note she did not know what it represented and did not understand the significance of the note until it came out in a hearing held by the United States Securities Exchange Commission in January and February, 1948. During her cross-examination she said that she understood the note represented the proceeds from the sale of her stock; that she knew that when she got the note. This last is the testimony upon which appellants rely. At most, it tends to produce a conflict, not necessarily a substantial conflict. She well may have understood that the paper she received in July represented in some way the proceeds of the sale of her stock without understanding the legal significance of the document, continuing confidently to believe that she still had a full credit balance with the firm.

■ Both appellants further claim that this purported loan transaction was personal to Hammill and the respondent, and resulted in the substitution of Hammill’s obligation for that of the partnership. They would conclude, therefore, that Ahrnke has no legal liability as a mere partner, and the bonding company none because its undertaking was not to secure the lending of money to the partnership or to a partner and the substitution of Hammill as a debtor for the partnership as trustee was an alteration of the principal’s obligation which operated as a discharge of the surety. There -well might be *618 merit in this point but for the fraud and the violation of the fiduciary relationship by Hammill.

Commencing April 11, 1947, when Hammill and Company received the proceeds of the sale of stock the partnership owed respondent the amount of those proceeds. The mere book entry on May 15, transferring $4,000 from respondent’s account to Hammill’s did not of itself satisfy or pay any part of that obligation. Nor did the purported substitution in July of Hammill’s personal note, under the circumstances related, do so. A new obligation can be substituted for an old one only by contract of the parties, not'by any act of the debtor alone. (Civ. Code, §§ 1530-1532.) That, of course, means that such a substitution must be with the consent of the creditor. (See cases collected in 20 Cal. Jur. 250, Novation, § 5.) This creditor did not give her consent. The transfer on the books and the sending of his personal note to respondent was a bit of legerdemain upon the part of Hammill to cover up his misappropriation of $4,000 of respondent’s moneys received by the partnership and held by it in trust for plaintiff. For such a misapplication by a partner, the partnership is bound. (Civ. Code, § 2408; now Corp. Code, § 15014.) Under either theory there has been a breach of the obligation of the broker’s bond given pursuant to section 6 of the Corporate Securities Act (now Corp. Code, § 25703) “for the use and benefit of interested persons, ’ ’ undertaking that Hammill and Company, its agents and employees, shall strictly comply with the provisions of that act and “shall honestly and faithfully apply all funds received, and faithfully and honestly perform all obligations and undertakings in the purchase or sale of securities by said broker, his agents and employees.”

The appellant bonding company invokes sections 2819-2821 of the Civil Code as exonerating it. Section 2819 declares that a surety is exonerated “if by any act of the creditor, without the consent of the surety the original obligation of the principal is altered in any respect, or the remedies or rights of the creditor against the principal, in respect thereto, in any way impaired or suspended.” This by its own terms would be inapplicable when, as here, no alteration or change of position occurred “by any act of the creditor.”

It is true, as urged by the bonding company, that section 2820 says “That a promise by a creditor is for any cause void, or voidable by him at his option, shall not prevent it from altering the obligation or suspending or impairing *619

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Bluebook (online)
237 P.2d 706, 107 Cal. App. 2d 614, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gift-v-ahrnke-calctapp-1951.