Knight v. Marks

226 P. 931, 66 Cal. App. 593, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 490
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4802.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 226 P. 931 (Knight v. Marks) 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
Knight v. Marks, 226 P. 931, 66 Cal. App. 593, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 490 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

St. SURE, J.

This is the second appeal in this case. The action was brought to recover money claimed to be due to the plaintiffs’ testatrix upon a lease executed by her to Benjamin L. Marks on October 22, 1908. Plaintiffs sought to obtain" liquidated damages for the nonpayment of rent, and to forfeit a deposit held by the German Savings and Loan Society as security. The cause was first tried by a jury, and upon the verdict judgment was rendered in favor *595 of plaintiffs and against Marks for the sum of twenty-nine hundred dollars, and against Bianchi and the German Savings and Loan Society for the sum of $11,222.87. From this judgment the defendant Joseph C. Bianchi appealed. The supreme court reversed the judgment upon the ground that the breach of the lease complained of being merely nonpayment of rent, plaintiffs were not entitled to liquidated damages under section 1670 of the Civil Code. (Knight v. Marks, 183 Cal. 354 [191 Pac. 531].) Upon the filing of the remittitur in the court below, plaintiffs amended their complaint and upon the second trial made no claim to liquidated damages, but claimed that the deposit was a general security for the lease, and that they had the right to apply it in satisfaction of unpaid rent.

Defendant Bianchi set up six special defenses in his answer. The first is to the effect that the money deposited was, at the time of the deposit, the property of C. D. Bianchi; that Mrs. Knight had been informed prior to and at the time of the deposit that the money deposited was the property of Bianchi, and that it was furnished by Bianchi for the purpose of making the deposit, and that it was only pledged by Bianchi as security for the obligations of Marks, and that Marks had no other interest in it. The second defense pleads a judgment in an action pending in the superior court and numbered 56,400, wherein Bianchi was plaintiff and B. L. Marks and the German Savings and Loan Society were defendants. The third defense is a narration of the various provisions of the lease secured by the deposit. The fourth defense alleges that by an executed oral agreement between these plaintiffs, as executors of the will of Mrs. Knight, and Marks as lessee, made on or about the first day of January, 1916, the rent under the lease was reduced from one thousand dollars to seven hundred dollars per month, and that all rental due under the lease has been paid. The fifth defense is that the judgment upon the former trial is final and bars the further prosecution of this action. The sixth defense alleges that defendant Marks, with the written consent of plaintiffs, and without the consent of defendant Joseph 0. Bianchi, assigned the lease to the Central Garage Company, and that said assignee took possession of and occupies the premises as tenant of plaintiffs and as assignee of Marks.

*596 The trial court found that the money deposited was loaned to Marks by C. D. Bianehi, and that at the time of the deposit Marks was the owner thereof; that it is not true that Mrs. Knight had been informed that the sum deposited was the, property of C. D. Bianehi, nor that it was furnished by Bianehi as security for the obligations of Marks under the lease, nor that Marks had no other interest therein; that it is not true that the money was pledged by C. D. Bianehi as security for the obligations of said Marks under the lease, or otherwise.

The trial court further found that Serena H. Knight was not a party to nor interested in said action in the superior court, numbered 56,400, and that the said action did not in any manner or to any extent affect or alter the right, title or interest of said Serena H. Knight in or to said fund.

The trial court further found that the allegations of the fourth defense are not true, and as to the fifth defense, it was found that the judgment recovered in the former trial is not final nor a bar, as said judgment has been reversed and set aside by the supreme court.

It was further found that the allegations contained in the sixth defense are untrue.

Judgment was given in the trial court in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendant Marks for the sum of $16,400, unpaid, rent, and $200 attorneys’ fees as provided in the lease. The judgment further declared that the defendant Bianehi had an interest in the deposit, subject to the right of plaintiffs to apply the deposit and accrued interest in satisfaction of the judgment against Marks, and provided that any balance of the deposit remaining after the satisfaction of the judgment against Marks should be paid to Bianehi. Prom this judgment the defendant Bianehi alone appeals.

The appellant contends first, that as the supreme court has held that the provision in the lease for the application of the' deposit to the payment of liquidated damages is void, the security cannot be taken for any other purpose; second, that the ruling of the lower court that the $8,000 'was loaned by C. D. Bianehi to Marks cannot be upheld because delivery of the money to the debtor is necessary to ■ constitute a loan, and no such delivery was shown; third, that the deposit in the German Bank was a pledge; and *597 fourth, that when C. D. Bianchi furnished Marks with the money with which to-make the deposit, the former became a surety and was discharged when Mrs. Knight and Marks entered into the contract of May 13, 1912, modifying the lease by extending the term and making other changes.

The facts on this appeal and those presented on the first appeal, are almost identical. We quote and adopt the following clear and succinct statement from the opinion of Mr. Justice Shaw in Knight v. Marks, 183 Cal. 354 [191 Pac. ,331]: “The lease embraced property upon which the lessor agreed to erect a building in accordance with plans and specifications annexed thereto. ... It was for the term of ten years, beginning thirty days after the completion of the building. The total rental was one hundred and twenty thousand dollars, payable in monthly installments of one thousand dollars each on the first day of each month, and Marks was to pay two hundred dollars as attorneys’ fees in any action by the lessor against the lessee for a breach of any covenant of the lease. It provided that the lessee should furnish eight thousand dollars as security for the performance of the covenants on his part, which sum should be deposited in the German Savings and Loan Society in the names and for the joint account of the lessor and lessee, there to remain with such interest as should accumulate thereon, provided that in the event of failure to pay .rent or other breach of covenant by Marks, the ‘lessor may withdraw from the said account the entire sum, together with the accumulated interest, as agreed liquidated damages for the breach,’ and that upon the termination of the lease by expiration of time or otherwise, any balance of the money and interest so on deposit and not applied to the claims of the lessor, should be returned to the lessee. . . . The evidence showed that at the time the money was deposited, 0. D. Bianchi, as a loan to Marks for the purposes of said lease, gave him a cheek for eight thousand dollars to be used in making said deposit; that the cheek was indorsed by Marks and transferred to the bank, and that the deposit was, by that means, effected.

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Bluebook (online)
226 P. 931, 66 Cal. App. 593, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-marks-calctapp-1924.