Hall v. King

279 P. 814, 100 Cal. App. 70, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 349
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 19, 1929
DocketDocket No. 6450.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 279 P. 814 (Hall v. King) 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
Hall v. King, 279 P. 814, 100 Cal. App. 70, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 349 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Plaintiffs recovered judgment upon two counts: First, $300 balance due upon a promissory note, together with attorney fees and costs, and, second, $500 for real estate broker’s commission. Defendant appeals.

The plaintiffs sued in the style as above set forth in the title of this canse. The promissory note sued upon was made payable to the order of “Hall Baker Co.” No assignment of the note from Hall Baker Co. to Hall & Baker was alleged or proven, but judgment was nevertheless given plaintiffs, apparently upon the theory that the payee of the note was in fact the plaintiffs above named. Defend *72 ant’s objection to the introduction of the note in evidence upon the ground of variance in this respect was overruled by the court.

Defendant pleaded as a special defense in his answer that plaintiffs had not filed a copartnership certificate as required by law. The court found this allegation to be untrue. Since the trial of the case the Supreme Court, in Andrews v. Glick, 205 Cal. 699 [272 Pac. 587], has held that the name Andrews-Cordano Plumbing Company was a designation not showing the names of the persons interested as partners in such business and, therefore, its sole members, Andrews and Cordano, were required to file a certificate under Civil Code, section 2466, showing the names of the persons interested in the company before maintaining that action. Under this authority and the eases cited therein, while the name Sail & Baker is not a fictitious name nor one not showing the names of the persons interested, the name Hall Baker Co. does come within the meaning of the section. The penalty for not filing the copartnership certificate is the inability of such firm or its assignee to maintain any action upon or on account of any contract or transaction had under such name. (Civ. Code, sec. 2468.) The promissory note sued upon in the first count of this action is, prima facie, such a contract or transaction because it was made payable to Hall Baker Co.

Upon the record it would be the duty of this court to reverse the judgment given upon the first count, which would result in a new trial upon the sole issue of whether the plaintiffs were barred from maintaining action upon this count because of having accepted the note made payable to. Hall Baker Co. and thus doing business under a designation not showing the names of the persons interested as partners and without having filed and published the certificate as required by Civil Code, section 2466. Such an order for a partial new trial was made in Rudneck v. Southern California M. & R. Co., 184 Cal. 274 [193 Pac. 775], This court, desiring to avoid the disproportionate delay and expense of returning this $300 cause of action for a new trial, made an order on its own motion after submission and consideration of this appeal permitting the parties to produce in this court additional evidence upon this issue. The order was as broad in its terms.as *73 permitted by section 956a of the Code of Civil Procedure and rule xxxviii of the rules of the Supreme Court and District Courts of Appeal. It would have permitted respondents to produce evidence that although the note happened to be made payable to Hall Baker Co., nevertheless the plaintiffs had in fact never done business under that name. The evidence produced and offered in this court, however, showed that respondents elected a different course. They produced documentary evidence in an effort to show that since the making of our said order and before the final hearing, date for such additional evidence they had filed and published the certificate required by section 2466 of the Civil Code showing the names of the persons interested in Hall Baker Co. to be the respondents herein. However, the documents offered for that purpose are so inherently defective that no competent proof of the issue has been made and the judgment on the first count must be reversed.

The second count, as pleaded in the amended complaint, was in the form of mdebitatus assumpsit for the agreed price of $500 for services of plaintiffs as real estate agents. Evidence under this count showed a transaction with the plaintiffs in the name of Hall & Baker which is not a fictitious name nor one not designating the persons interested in the partnership. Defendant does not claim and did not plead in his answer that other persons were interested in the partnership besides the two plaintiffs whose names appear in the designation Hall & Baker.

Plaintiffs’ bill of particulars served upon defendant’s demand set forth a writing executed by defendant on August 21, 1925, which, after dealing with other matters, read “should I at a later date want to sell the . . . above lot . . . Hall & Baker are to have an exclusive authorization so to do and in the event of sale their commission is to be $500.” The bill stated that plaintiffs, acting on said last-quoted part of said agreement, undertook to sell said property, listing the same and in particular specifying the following services: That Baker had held several conversations with a prospective purchaser, Linehan; that plaintiffs did not recall the exact dates of said services, but alleged that they were between March 15 and May 14, 1926; that during said period plaintiff Hall advised defendant of said *74 efforts to sell; that thereafter defendants sold the property to said Linehan and had not paid plaintiffs the agreed commission.

The court found that plaintiffs were the procuring cause of said sale and gave plaintiffs judgment for the $500 commission accordingly.

The attitude of plaintiffs at the trial, as shown by their objections to testimony, was that they were entitled to the commission no matter to whom nor by whom nor how the property was sold so long as it was in fact sold. The court’s findings, however, are that the plaintiffs were the procuring cause of the sale. On this appeal the argument of respondents runs along the line that plaintiffs were prevented from performing the contract by the sale of the property by the owner. We think the court’s view was the correct one.

The agreement was an exclusive agency, not an agreement giving the exclusive right to sell. An exclusive agency agreement binds the owner to refrain from selling through any other real estate agent, but does not mean that he may not sell it himself personally and directly if he finds a purchaser on his own account. (Waterman v. Boltinghouse, 82 Cal. 659 [23 Pac. 195] ; Snook v. Page, 29 Cal. App. 246 [155 Pac. 107]; California Land Security Co. v. Ritchie, 40 Cal. App. 246, 258 [180 Pac. 625].)

The written agreement is in an unusual form. Appellant claims it is only an agreement to employ plaintiffs at a future date. Plaintiff Baker’s testimony was that when he told defendant that he was trying to sell to Linehan, defendant said, “That is good, try and sell it”; that when he asked defendant for a contract, defendant replied that none was necessary, that plaintiffs already had an agreement and that when the property was sold, no matter who sold it, plaintiffs would get the $500 commission.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 P. 814, 100 Cal. App. 70, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-king-calctapp-1929.