Hutchison v. Holland
This text of 190 P. 1072 (Hutchison v. Holland) 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.
Opinion
Defendant Holland appeals from a judgment entered against him. The action was brought to recover a balance due on two promissory notes. The notes were executed by defendant Marie C. Heath, and certain real property was made security for the payment thereof, against which a trust deed was executed. Appellant did not join in the making of the promissory notes or the
deed;
in fact, his name did not appear in the instruments referred to at all. The notes, as before mentioned, were two in number; one was made payable to Elizabeth E. Curtis and the second to Helen C. Brennan. The two last-named persons indorsed the same and they were transferred to Nina A. Hutchison, who paid therefor $1,750. At the time the trust deed and notes were executed there was a first mortgage lien against the property, amounting to $3,000; hence the trust deed became second in order of security. Default was made in
*711
the payment of the notes, and upon sale of the property under the trust deed being had, a small part only of the principal debt evidenced by the notes was realized. Nina
A'.
Hutchison transferred her interest to the plaintiff here and this suit was brought to collect the deficiency. It was alleged in the complaint, and the court found the facts accordingly, that Holland was the undisclosed principal of Marie C. Heath. While rendering judgment against Holland, the court found in favor of Marie C. Heath and determined that she was not liable for any part of the money claimed. It is the contention of appellant that where a promissory note is executed unqualifiedly it cannot be asserted that there exists any undisclosed principal against whom recovery may be had. Respondent has cited ample authority to show that appellant is correct only in his statement of the law where the notes considered are negotiable; that where the notes are not negotiable, an undisclosed principal may be held.
The judgment is reversed.
Conrey,- P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on July 22, 1920, a majority of the Justices not having assented to the granting thereof.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
190 P. 1072, 47 Cal. App. 710, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchison-v-holland-calctapp-1920.