Kriste v. International Savings & Exchange Bank

119 P. 666, 17 Cal. App. 301, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 82
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 24, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 967.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 P. 666 (Kriste v. International Savings & Exchange Bank) 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
Kriste v. International Savings & Exchange Bank, 119 P. 666, 17 Cal. App. 301, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 82 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

This action was brought by plaintiffs upon two alleged demands against defendant, the first being to recover the sum of $306.50, money alleged to have been deposited with defendant bank and which the latter had refused to repay the plaintiffs; the second being for the sum of $126, as damages alleged to have been suffered by plaintiffs because of the failure of defendant to give seasonable notice to the plaintiffs of the dishonor of certain negotiable instruments in the form of time-checks, which had been indorsed to defendant for the purpose of collection. The judgment was in favor of the plaintiffs on both counts of their complaint, and this appeal is taken from that judgment, and also from an order denying a motion for a new trial.

In answering the first cause of action alleged by the plaintiffs, defendant admitted that the sum of money first claimed had been deposited with it in the usual course of its banking business and placed to the credit of plaintiffs. It was then set out by way of special defense that this credit had been levied upon under writ of execution issued on a judgment of the justice’s court of Los Angeles township in an action brought by one Brodzevich against the plaintiffs, and that the full amount deposited had been paid to the constable holding such writ, upon his demand. At the trial, for the purpose of establishing this defense, the defendant called the clerk of the justice’s court as a witness, who produced the docket of the justice and the files in the justice court action. The docket record was then offered in evidence, but upon a general objection being made by plaintiffs that this offered record was incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, the court refused to allow the evidence to be received. The bill of exceptions shows that, after the offer had been made, the trial judge examined the record. The bill of exceptions then proceeds: “The Court: I find no summons here. Defendant’s Attorney: The summons is not there, Judge; it’s gone. The Court: There is a complaint and execution. Thereupon the court sustained the plaintiffs’ objection to the question aforesaid propounded to the witness and as corrected by the court, *304 to wit: ‘ Q. Now, you have the docket. Will you please read the court the docket in the case ? ’ and refused to permit the justice’s docket .to he introduced and read in evidence.” The witness was allowed to testify that he knew that a summons in the justice court ease had been returned, and that since its return it had been lost; that he had made a diligent search, but could not find it. This witness was asked several questions to which objections were made and sustained by the court. Among these questions was the following: “Now, Mr. Clerk, what day was that summons issued?” The court after sustaining an objection to this question remarked: “If you are going to prove a lost summons you will have to prove its contents by somebody who saw it and remembers its contents.” Counsel for defendant then proceeded with the following questions: “Well, do you know whether on the seventh day of March of this year, in the case of Mike Brodzevich against George Christe and Prkachin a summons was issued?” “Do you know what the contents of that summons was, if one was issued?” To each question objection made by the plaintiffs was sustained. The writ of execution as issued on the justice court judgment was allowed in evidence by the trial judge, and, so far as the bill of exceptions shows, this writ was the only document of the files of the justice’s court which was permitted to be introduced in evidence, and there was no testimony, other than that stated, which referred to that action. Such was the state of the evidence with reference to the first cause of action when defendant rested, and the plaintiffs offered no testimony of any sort in rebuttal. If it appeared from the docket record of the justice referred to that the action in which judgment was rendered and the execution mentioned had issued was an action in which the plaintiffs here were defendants, then such record was admissible in evidence. Section 911 of the Code of Civil Procedure prescribes what entries shall be made in a justice’s docket, and section 912 of the same code provides that such entries, or a transcript thereof, certified by the justice, are prima facie evidence of the facts stated. In the entries required to be made in a justice’s court docket is a statement of the title of the action, the amount of the claim, a minute of the pleadings, and the judgment of the court. As a part *305 of its preliminary proof, defendant was entitled to have the docket record received in evidence. Of course, this record would not furnish complete proof in support of the judgment rendered by the justice until proof had been made of service of summons. (Rowley v. Howard, 23 Cal. 401; Fisk v. Mitchell, 124 Cal. 359, [57 Pac. 149] ; Kane v. Desmond, 63 Cal. 464, and cases therein cited.) It having appeared that the summons in the justice court action had been lost, the justice’s clerk was a competent witness by whom to prove the issuance and service thereof. The questions asked of this witness, to which objection was sustained by the court, tended to that end. The witness was asked to state whether he knew that a summons had been issued, also what the contents of the summons was, but these questions he was not permitted to answer. In the findings of the court, however, it is determined that an action was brought in the justice’s court against Geo. Christe and Geo. Perkochin; that judgment was rendered therein and execution issued, and that the defendant paid to the constable holding the execution, upon his demand, the amount of plaintiffs’ deposit. It is further found that the defendants in that action were not the plaintiffs in this suit. Appellant argues, and very properly, we think, that it having been found by the court in accordance with the allegations of the answer that a judgment was rendered in the justice’s court upon which the execution was issued, the further finding of the court that the plaintiffs in this action are not the same as the defendants in the justice court action is not sustained by the evidence. In the justice’s court action the names of the defendants there were spelled “Christe” and “Prkachin,” while the true names of plaintiffs were spelled “Kriste” and “Perkaein.” These names as so differently spelled were of such similar sound as to make the rule of idem sonans clearly applicable. (Donohoe-Kelly Banking Co. v. Southern Pacific Co., 138 Cal. 183, [94 Am. St. Rep. 28, 71 Pac. 93].) Identity of persons is presumed from identity of names. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1963, subd. 25.) Therefore, the record of the justice’s court would have furnished prima facie evidence of the identity of the defendants in that action with the plaintiffs here. As before noted, the plaintiffs did not, on their own behalf, at *306 tempt to show that in fact they were not the persons designated as defendants in the action brought in the justice’s court. There was, therefore, no sufficient evidence upon which to base the finding made by the trial judge that the identity of the parties was not the same.

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Bluebook (online)
119 P. 666, 17 Cal. App. 301, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kriste-v-international-savings-exchange-bank-calctapp-1911.