Hiett v. Inland Finance Corp.

291 P. 414, 210 Cal. 293, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 383
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1930
DocketDocket No. Sac. 4327.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 291 P. 414 (Hiett v. Inland Finance Corp.) 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
Hiett v. Inland Finance Corp., 291 P. 414, 210 Cal. 293, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 383 (Cal. 1930).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

Action brought for the cancellation of a note and mortgage, executed by the respondents in favor of The Inland Finance Corporation, hereinafter referred to as appellant, on the alleged ground that the same were executed and delivered under fear and menace resulting from threats made by the president of the appellant that unless said note and mortgage were executed he would' prosecute Merton G-. Hiett, the son of respondents, for embezzlement. The appellant denied that any such threats were made or that the note and mortgage were executed as the result of such threats. The action was tried, and the court found upon the issues made by the pleadings in favor of the plaintiffs and respondents.

The facts out of which this controversy arose are, in brief, as follows: Merton G-. Hiett, the son of the respondents, who was then about twenty-three years of age, was in the automobile business at Modesto, California, with L. H. McFarland and M. M. McFarland, under the firm name of McFarland & Hiett. The appellant had been furnishing money to said firm for the purchase of automobiles to be sold in said business under an agreement whereby appellant retained the title to said automobiles until they were sold, at which time appellant was to receive a certain specific portion of the price for which they were sold. The business did not prosper and as one of the results thereof the firm of McFarland & Hiett failed to pay to appellant *295 various sums of money due the appellant from the sale of automobiles by said firm. On September 22, 1925, there was due appellant from said firm on automobiles so sold $4,486.80. On that date appellant accepted two notes from the firm in settlement of this indebtedness — one for $1,000 and the other for $3,486.80. The first of these was paid. The other was secured by deed to certain real property and a pledge of personal property. Subsequent to September 22, 1925, the firm became further indebted to appellant in the sum of $4,732.12. On November 17, 1925, a meeting was held at the office of Mr. Fitch, an accountant in Modesto, at which were present Mr. H. C. Hiett, Merton G. Hiett, his son, Mr. Fitch, Mr. Neil I. Ross, agent and president of appellant corporation, Mr. Louttit, attorney for the appellant, and Mr. Dubois, a factory representative. At this meeting the financial situation of the firm was discussed. After the meeting broke up, Mr. Ross accompanied Mr. H. C. Hiett to his ranch in order to explain to Mrs. Hiett, wife of H. C. Hiett, the involved affairs of the firm with a view to securing her consent to a mortgage of the ranch as security for the indebtedness of the firm to the appellant. The next afternoon Mr. H. C. Hiett and his wife, Addie M. Hiett, and the son, Merton G. Hiett, executed a note for $8,732.12, and H. C. Hiett and Addie M. Hiett executed a mortgage on their ranch as security for the payment of the note. This sum of $8,732.12 was made up of the $4,732.12 already due appellant and the sum of $4,000 to be advanced by appellant to carry on the business. At the same meeting an agreement was signed between appellant and Merton G. Hiett, who was to take over the firm business from the McFarlands, whereby the appellant agreed to advance $4,000 to carry on the firm business, and Merton G. Hiett agreed that the business should be carried on by a manager to be named by the appellant. Shortly thereafter, and as a part of the same transaction, an agreement between Merton G. Hiett and the McFarlands was entered into whereby the existing partnership was dissolved and Merton G. Hiett agreed to assume certain partnership obligations in consideration for a transfer to him of the partnership assets. After the meeting of November 18, 1925, the business was conducted as the Modesto Star Sales Co. by the manager appointed by the *296 appellant. It continued to show a loss and on March 12, 1926, was sold to another firm. By letter of May 13, 1926, Boss informed Mr. H. C. Hiett that the original note of $3,486.80 had been marked paid and the sum of $5,365.11 had been credited on the note for $8,732.12, leaving a balance of $3,367.01 due upon the note secured by the mortgage. In November, 1926, Boss wrote to Mr. H. C. Hiett insisting that a payment be made upon the note. On December 6, 1926, this action to have said note and mortgage canceled was commenced by respondents. Appellant filed a cross-complaint against H. C. Hiett, Addie M. Hiett and Merton G. Hiett for $3,367.01, the amount alleged to be due on the promissory note for $8,732.12. An order of the court was made bringing in Merton G. Hiett as a party defendant and his answer to the cross-complaint was filed. A judgment in favor of H. C. Hiett, Addie M. Hiett and Merton G. Hiett that said promissory note for $8,732.12 and the mortgage be discharged and canceled was rendered by the trial court. From this judgment the defendant has appealed.

On appeal the appellant presents three grounds for a reversal of the judgment: (1) The findings are unsupported by the evidence; (2) the respondents failed to restore to appellant the money advanced by appellant, and (3) respondents are guilty of loches.

There is ample evidence, direct and unequivocal, in the record before us to support the findings of the trial court that the execution of the note and mortgage in suit was obtained from the respondents by means of menace. H. 0. Hiett testified that about a month prior to the giving of the note and mortgage his son, Merton, came to him with a request for $333.33, telling him that he was in trouble with the finance company, and that unless he could obtain $333.33 to pay his share of a promissory note for $1,000, he would be put “in the jug.” The money requested was loaned by H. O. Hiett. H. C. Hiett testified that on November 17, 1925, about a month later, he was requested by his son to attend a meeting at Mr. Fitch’s office at which the financial situation of the firm was discussed. At that time he was told by Mr. Boss, president of the finance company, that “he had loaned them (meaning the firm) money, and that they had misused his money. . . . They had embezzled *297 money, rather, that is the word used, and unless there was something done, that he could put them in the penitentiary.” Hiett further testified that during the conversation at the ranch between Mr. Ross and Mrs. Hiett, that “Mr. Ross explained to her that the boys, the McFarland boys and Merton, had used his money and they had also embezzled his money and that unless there was something done, . . . unless it could be fixed up satisfactory, he would have to put them in the penitentiary, they had committed an offense.” In response to a direct query as to what was the inducement which motivated him in signing the note and mortgage, he testified, “I could not stand to see my son go to the penitentiary, which Mr. Ross had made us believe that he could do, and that I would give anything to keep my boy out of there. I couldn’t stand to see my boy go to the penitentiary.”

Mrs. Hiett testified that Mr. Ross told her when he visited at the ranch that the McFarland boys and Merton “had embezzled his money and that if it wasn’t fixed up, ‘I can put them in the penitentiary’ and ‘that is what I will have to do.’ ” She testified that the reason she signed the note and mortgage was “to keep him (her son) out of the penitentiary. ’ ’

Merton G. Hiett testified that during one of the conversations relative to the business of the firm, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
291 P. 414, 210 Cal. 293, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hiett-v-inland-finance-corp-cal-1930.