Henderson v. Drake

292 P.2d 254, 138 Cal. App. 2d 621, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2410
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 23, 1956
DocketCiv. 16601
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 292 P.2d 254 (Henderson v. Drake) 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
Henderson v. Drake, 292 P.2d 254, 138 Cal. App. 2d 621, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2410 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

NOURSE, P. J.

Plaintiff sued on a sight draft for 87,000 pesos allegedly accepted by defendant in Mexico City on May 12, 1946, and in a second cause of action, on a judgment given in Mexico City upon said draft. The prior decisions in this action are mentioned in Henderson v. Drake, 134 Cal.App.2d 145 [285 P.2d 79], One of them, Henderson v. Drake, 118 Cal.App.2d 777 [258 P.2d 879], affirmed an order granting a motion of plaintiff for a new trial after judgment for defendant, the order having specified insufficiency of the evidence as one of the grounds. The retrial of the case resulted in a judgment on the verdict for plaintiff on the first cause of action and in a judgment dismissing the second cause of action with prejudice on the ground that the Mexican court had no jurisdiction of the person of defendant. (The second count had by stipulation been withdrawn from the jury to be decided by the court. The court gave its decision in a separate judgment after the judgment on the verdict for plaintiff had been entered.) Defendant has appealed from the judgment on the verdict, complaining of errors in instruction only. Plaintiff has cross-appealed from the judgment dismissing his second cause of action in the event that the judgment on the first cause of action would be reversed.

It was the position of plaintiff, a Mexican lawyer of United States origin, that the draft was accepted by defendant in payment of extensive legal services rendered and costs paid by plaintiff for defendant since the death of defendant’s husband in 1943 in several matters including those relating to the estate of her deceased husband and the avoiding of inheritance tax on it. It was the position of defendant that, although her signature appeared on the draft, it had been obtained by fraud and conspiracy of plaintiff with a certain Antonio Acosta Cruz, who at the time acted as her business agent and who made her sign many blank papers for fictitious purposes; plaintiff had rendered some minor services but had never presented a bill for them and therefore there had *623 been no payment; there was no consideration for the acceptance of the draft. The Mexican judgment was obtained by default, after defendant had left Mexico, by service on Antonio Acosta Cruz, who claimed to be defendant’s agent by power of attorney, which power of attorney was denied by defendant.

Defendant’s first contention is, that if the draft was accepted by her, which she denies, it was accepted in payment of plaintiff’s alleged services as an attorney and arose from a confidential attorney-client relationship, so that the presumptions of lack of consideration and undue influence of section 2235 of the Civil Code applied and it was error to give an instruction requested by plaintiff to the effect that if defendant relies on fraud or misrepresentation inducing the signing of the draft she had the burden of proving such fraud and misrepresentation. Whatever there be of the correctness of said contention as an abstract proposition, at any rate the contention is not available to appellant. She did not request any instruction on section 2235 of the Civil Code and the court gave at her request the following instructions as to the defense of lack of consideration:

“Absence or failure of consideration is a matter of defense as against any person not a holder in due course; and partial failure of consideration is a defense pro tanto whether the failure is an ascertained and liquidated amount or otherwise.
“The burden of showing a want of consideration is upon the acceptor of a bill of exchange. However, there can be no recovery upon a bill of exchange which the evidence shows has been executed without a consideration.”

These instructions applied to the facts of this case put the burden of proof on defendant contrary to her present contention that under section 2235, supra, the burden of proof of consideration is on plaintiff. The above instructions requested by defendant may well be correct because there was evidence that at the date of the acceptance of the draft the attorney-client relation between plaintiff and defendant had ended and defendant had another attorney. But if, as now contended by appellant, the relationship at that time was still in existence, the quoted instructions of defendant, in ignoring said relationship and the presumptions which follow from it, contained the same error as the one of which she now complains. “It is well established that a party cannot complain of an error in an instruction given at the request of his adversary when one requested by him also *624 contains the same error.” (Zuckerman v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London, 42 Cal.2d 460, 470 [267 P.2d 777].)

Appellant further attacks the following instruction given at the request of plaintiff:

“The defendant in this action pleads a complete and total lack of consideration for the acceptance of the draft. If you find from the evidence that defendant signed the acceptance of the draft, and that, at and before the time she signed it, she owed Mr. Henderson some amount of money for his services, you are instructed that said antecedent debt constituted a good and valuable consideration for the acceptance.”

It is correctly said that said instruction is defective in that it omits the requirement that defendant must have agreed to accept the draft in return for said consideration. See Simmons v. California Institute of Technology, 34 Cal.2d 264, 272 [209 P.2d 581], and Bard v. Kent, 19 Cal.2d 449, 452 [122 P.2d 8, 139 A.L.R. 1032], in both of which cases the following language is quoted from section 75 of the Restatement, Contracts (com. b-c):

“Consideration must actually be bargained for as the exchange for the promise . . . The existence or non-existence of a bargain where something has been parted with by the promisee or received by the promisor depends upon the manifested intention of the parties . . . The fact that the promisee relies on the promise to his injury, or the promisor gains some advantage therefrom, does not establish consideration without the element of bargain or agreed exchange.”

The defect is highly prejudicial because defendant conceded that plaintiff had rendered some minor services but denied that she had accepted the draft in consideration of said services or knowingly for any consideration at all. If the fact alone that she owed Mr. Henderson some money for his services was sufficient to constitute good consideration for the acceptance, then appellant’s above position would not constitute the defense of lack of consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 P.2d 254, 138 Cal. App. 2d 621, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-drake-calctapp-1956.