Herbert Kraft Co. v. Bryan

73 P. 745, 140 Cal. 73, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 557
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1903
DocketSac. No. 847.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 73 P. 745 (Herbert Kraft Co. v. Bryan) 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
Herbert Kraft Co. v. Bryan, 73 P. 745, 140 Cal. 73, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 557 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

*76 McFARLAND, J.

This is an action to recover the balance alleged to be due on a certain negotiable promissory note,—the complaint containing the averments necessary to the proper statement of a cause of action on such an instrument. It is averred that on June 3, 1893, the defendants, James M. Bryan and Dollie L. Bryan, made and delivered their promissory note (a copy of which is given) to one Herbert Kraft, in which they promised to pay to said Kraft, or order, two years after date, ten thousand dollars, with interest at nine per cent per annum; that thereafter Herbert Kraft assigned and transferred said note to plaintiff; that certain named payments had been made on said note, and that there was due and unpaid thereon the sum of $2,318, with interest; and for this last named amount, with costs, etc., plaintiff prayed judgment. James M. Bryan died after the commencement of the action and after the various pleadings had been filed, and the other defendant, Dollie L. Bryan, was substituted for him as his administratrix. Judgment was rendered in the court below as prayed for in the complaint; and Dollie L. Bryan as such administratrix, and in her own individual capacity, appeals from the judgment.

The defendants filed an answer in which they denied some of the averments as to the assignment, the amount paid, the amount due, etc.; but the court found all the averments of the complaint to be true, and as no evidence about these matters is brought up, no question is before us as to these findings. But by the fourth paragraph of the answer a separate defense is set up, and the facts averred as constituting this defense are also set up in a cross-complaint. The plaintiff demurred to this fourth defense, and moved to strike out the cross-complaint, and the court sustained the demurrer and granted the motion to strike out. These rulings of the court below to which appellant excepted present the questions involved on this appeal.

The material facts averred in the fourth paragraph of the answer, and in the cross-complaint, are substantially these: On December 11, 1893,—about six months after the making of the note sued on,—the said James M. and Dollie L. Bryan executed a deed of trust conveying to George H. Kraft and E. P. Kraft, as trustees, certain lands as security for the payment of said note (and also for any further advances *77 which Herbert Kraft might make to them; but as there were no such other advances this part of the deed is of no further consequence). The conveyance was in the usual form of deeds of trust which have been in use in this state as security for a great many.years. It provided that if the grantors should pay the indebtedness at maturity, then the trustees should reconvey to the grantors the lands and estate conveyed by the trust deed; but if there should be a default in such payment, then the trustees, after giving notices and so forth, as provided in the deed, might sell the land to the highest bidder; “that at such sale the holder or holders of any indebtedness secured to be paid by the said deed of trust might bid and purchase thereat,” that the trustees should execute a deed of conveyance of the lands to the purchaser; that the trustees should apply the proceeds of the sale, after deducting certain expenses, to the payment of the said indebtedness intended to be secured; and that the surplus, if any, should be paid to the grantors. It is further averred that on June 13, 1896, the said trustees did sell said lands, under the provisions of the trust deed, to the plaintiff herein, the Herbert Kraft Company, a corporation, for ten thousand dollars, that being the highest bid offered at the sale, and executed to plaintiff a deed conveying said lands. It is further averred that at the time of the sale the two trustees were stockholdérs and directors of the said corporation, the purchaser. It is further averred on information and belief that since the said sale to plaintiff the latter sold and conveyed the premises to Martha B. Grinnell for $12,500, and she is averred to have purchased with knowledge of the above facts. There is no averment of the date of the alleged sale from plaintiff to Grinnell; but as the sale to plaintiff was made in June, 1896, and the answer and cross-complaint were filed in February, 1899, the alleged sale to Grinnell may have been two and a half years after the sale to plaintiff. There is no averment that the amount paid by plaintiff at the sale was not an adequate price. The foregoing are substantially the alleged facts upon which appellant bases her contentions for a reversal of the judgment. There are no averments of fraud or misconduct on the part of the trustees in making the sale, or that there was not due notice given thereof, or that it was not conducted in all respects as directed by the trust-deed, or that the *78 premises were not sold to the highest bidder. There is no averment that the amount bid was not credited on the note; nor is there any offer to pay the balance due thereon.

On the above facts the appellant makes various "and inconsistent contentions. She contends that because the trustees were stockholders and directors of the plaintiff corporation, therefore their said sale to the latter was void, upon the principle that a trustee cannot sell to himself; and that, there having been no sale, plaintiff cannot maintain an action on the promissory note without having exhausted the security by a sale of the trust property. Then, again, it is contended that appellant is entitled to an accounting, and to have credited on the balance due on the note the difference between the price paid at the trustees’ sale and the price alleged to have been subsequently paid by Grinnell to plaintiff. This latter contention is, of course, inconsistent with the theory that there was no sale. It also seems to be contended that if the proceeds of' the sale were not sufficient to satisfy the debt, there could be no recovery of the balance due. The prayer—in both the answer and the cross-complaint—is, that the sale and deed to plaintiff “be declared void”; that there be an accounting between “said plaintiff” and appellant as to the gains, etc., “derived by sa£d trustees from the said trust property,” and “that the plaintiff’s action be dismissed”; and that appellant have such other relief, etc.

If we overlook the confusion of inconsistent contentions presented by appedant, we are unable to see any theory bused on the alleged facts which would warrant a reversal of the judgment. The theory of appellant’s right to an accounting must, of course, be based upon a recognition of the validity of the sale; and there is no principle upon which the purchaser at a valid sale can be held accountable for anything other than the payment of the purchase money. If the plaintiff bought the property at a valid sale, and paid the purchase price, it had no further liability in the premises. If appellant had averred facts sufficient to make an independent cause of action against the trustees for an accounting, such averment would have been no defense against the present action on the promissory note, nor a proper cross-complaint herein. But if there could be such an accounting in the present action *79 against the plaintiff, who is not a trustee, the facts alleged as above stated would have been insufficient for that purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P. 745, 140 Cal. 73, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herbert-kraft-co-v-bryan-cal-1903.