Legal Adjustment Bureau v. West Coast Construction Co.

298 P. 429, 162 Wash. 260, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 992
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1931
DocketNo. 22701. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 298 P. 429 (Legal Adjustment Bureau v. West Coast Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Legal Adjustment Bureau v. West Coast Construction Co., 298 P. 429, 162 Wash. 260, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 992 (Wash. 1931).

Opinions

Main, J.

This action was based upon a promissory note which had been transferred to the plaintiff for the purpose of bringing suit. To the complaint, the defendants pleaded a number of affirmative defenses. The cause came on for trial before the court and a jury, and, at the conclusion of the defendants’ evidence, the plaintiff made a motion for a directed verdict, which was sustained. Judgment was entered upon the verdict, as directed, in the sum of $45,795.80, from which the defendants appeal.

For many years the Scandinavian American Bank, a corporation, had been engaged, as its name would indicate, in the banking business in the city of Seattle. Hans Pederson, one of the appellants in this action, resided in the same city, where he was engaged in the contracting business, and was a frequent and sometimes a heavy borrower from the bank. The West Coast Construction Company is a corporation, the stock of which is owned by Pederson and one John Ottesen. May 20, 1916, for money loaned in the sum of $10,000, a note was given the bank, signed “West Coast Const. Co., by John Ottesen, Pres., by Hans Pederson, Sec.,” and endorsed on the back, “C. J. Erickson, Hans Pederson, John Ottesen.” Pederson testified that, due to a transaction which he had with Erickson, this note became Erickson’s primary obligation.

July 31, 1918, there being then in the bank a number of notes evidencing loans to Pederson, or notes upon which he was liable, and the bank desiring that these be merged into one note, a note for $25,400 was *262 given, which merged the other notes, including the $10,000 note mentioned. The merger note was renewed from time to time, and some payments were made thereon. The last renewal was on April 21,1921, for the sum of $26,300.40, which note by its terms was due June 11, 1921. It was signed “West Coast Const. Co., by Hans Pederson, Treas., by John Ottesen, Pres.,” and on the back was endorsed, “Hans Peder-son, John Ottesen.”

Pederson testified that, at the time that note was executed, he informed the cashier of the bank that the $10,000 note was Erickson’s obligation, and that it should be held by the bank until Erickson endorsed the $26,300.40 note to the extent of $10,000. Pederson further testified that, at each subsequent renewal of the merger note, he informed the cashier of the bank of the Erickson obligation, as he had when the original merger note was executed, and at all times the cashier had assented thereto.

June 30, 1921, the bank became insolvent, and was taken over by the state supervisor of banking, R. A. Langley being placed in charge as liquidator. Pederson testified that he told Langley, as he had already told the cashier of the bank, that the $10,000 note “was Erickson’s debt, it was collateral to the other note, and that it was not to be allowed to outlaw, and they stated that they would see to it that it didn’t.” Erickson at no time paid anything on the $10,000 note, and Pederson testified that he knew at all times that nothing was being paid.

The note for $26,300.40, together with other assets of the insolvent bank, was purchased by the Yance Lumber Company, which assets were sold by the liquidator under an order of the court, and title was taken in the name of Puget Sound Mortgage Company. As *263 above stated, the note was transferred to the respondent for the purpose of collection.

The first question is whether the trial court properly sustained a demurrer to the second affirmative defense. By this defense, the appellants pleaded that, sometime during the year 1920, Pederson had entered into a written contract with the bank by the terms of which interest on all sums of money or any obligations which he then had or would have with the bank, “no matter what the face of the obligation, would be payable at the rate of seven per cent per annum, and no more. ’ ’ The note upon which the suit is based was given on April 21, 1921, and subsequent to the date of the agreement pleaded. The note provided that if it was not paid at maturity, it would draw interest “at the rate of twelve per cent per annum.”

The legal effect of the note, which was subsequent to the agreement, was to rescind that agreement to the extent that the two were inconsistent. Sherman v. Sweeny, 29 Wash. 321, 69 Pac. 1117; Loudon v. Spencer, 84 Wash. 236, 146 Pac. 612; Bader v. Moore Building Co., 94 Wash. 221, 162 Pac. 8. The note having provided for interest at twelve per cent per annum after maturity, and it being subsequent to the agreement pleaded, the rate specified in the note would prevail. The trial court properly sustained the demurrer to the second affirmative defense.

The next question is whether the trial court rightly rejected the evidence offered in support of the fourth and fifth affirmative defenses. In the fourth affirmative defense, a transaction between the bank and appellant Pederson was pleaded, by which Pederson was induced to purchase stock in the Seattle Sawmills Company, a corporation, which transaction took place prior to the year 1916. It was said that the value *264 of the stock was incorrectly represented. In the fifth affirmative defense, it was pleaded that the bank had induced Pederson to purchase an eight thousand dollar note which it then held, and which was worthless. This transaction also occurred prior to the year 1916. The present action was begun September 27,1927. In reply to these affirmative defenses, the respondent had pleaded the statute of limitations.

The note sued upon was a separate and distinct transaction, which took place long afterwards, and had no connection whatever with the two matters pleaded.' The action upon the note did not remove the bar of the statute of limitations against the two defenses mentioned, in which the matters stated were pleaded as counterclaims or set-offs. Rem. Comp. Stat., § 266, provides:

“The defendant in a civil action upon a contract expressed or implied, may set off any demand of a like nature against the plaintiff in interest, which existed and belonged to him at the time of the commencement of the suit.”

It will be observed that, by this statute, the set-off ’ which may be pleaded must be one which existed at the time of the commencement of suit. The statute of limitations having run on the matters pleaded in the fourth and fifth affirmative defenses, no right of action existed thereon at the time the present suit was instituted. In a note to the case of Huggins v. Smith, 141 Ark. 87, 216 S. W. 1, 16 A. L. R. 323; in support of which many authorities are cited, the rule is stated:

“In the absence of an express statute, a demand of a defendant, whether pleaded by way of set-off, counterclaim, or cross -bill, is regarded as an affirmative action, and therefore, unlike a matter of pure defense, is subject to the operation of the statute of limitations, and is unavailable if barred.”

*265 The cases of Rubin v. Lucerne & Aurelia Crown R. Co., 87 Wash. 198, 151 Pac. 500, and Canadian Rank of Commerce v. Sampson, 145 Wash. 245, 259 Pac. 710, are to the same effect.

The cases of State ex rel.

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Bluebook (online)
298 P. 429, 162 Wash. 260, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/legal-adjustment-bureau-v-west-coast-construction-co-wash-1931.