Leitch v. Marx

131 P. 328, 21 Cal. App. 208, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 330
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 14, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1033.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 131 P. 328 (Leitch v. Marx) 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
Leitch v. Marx, 131 P. 328, 21 Cal. App. 208, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 330 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment entered upon an order granting the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit *210 upon the close of the paintiff’s case and from an order refusing to accord to the plaintiff a new trial.

The complaint alleges that, on or about the thirtieth day of June, 1911, Bceles & Smith Company, a corporation, regularly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of California, and. whose principal place of business is in the city and county of San Francisco, entered into a written contract of lease with the defendant, whereby the former leased to the latter certain machinery, which was to be used by the defendant at Rocklin, in Placer County. For the use of said machinery the defendant agreed to pay to said corporation, at the city of San Francisco, the sum of four hundred and fifty-five dollars, in installments .as follows: July 27, 1911, one hundred and fifty-two dollars; August 27, 1911, one hundred and fifty-two dollars; September 27, 1911, one hundred and fifty dollars. Said lease provided that “time is of the essence of this agreement,” and that a failure by the defendant strictly to keep and perform any of the covenants or provisions thereof to which he thereby obligated himself should work a cancellation of said lease, and that thereupon “all rights and interests of the lessee in or to said property shall cease, and all rent by lessee theretofore paid shall belong to the lessor as full payment for the prior use of said property. ’ It was agreed that a “ strict ’ ’ compliance by the lessee with all the covenants and provisions of the lease would entitle him to the right to purchase said property upon the payment to the lessor of the sum of one dollar.

The complaint alleges that, upon the execution of said agreement, the corporation delivered to the defendant the machinery therein referred to; that the defendant defaulted in the first and second payments provided for by said instrument, and that the defendant refused to pay the same on demand of payment; that, on the twenty-sixth day of September, 1911, and prior to the commencement of this action, said corporation assigned to the plaintiff all its right, title, and interest in and to the above mentioned claim against the defendant, for the recovery of which this action was instituted by the plaintiff.

'The record discloses this situation: That the plaintiff was an employee of the corporation, the assignor of the claim sued for, and that, upon the failure of the defendant to make the payments as stipulated in the written instrument above men *211 tioned, said corporation, through its secretary, by a writing, assigned the claim to the plaintiff. The assignment did not bear the official seal of the corporation, and when the contract of lease, with said assignment thereon, was offered in evidence by the plaintiff, an objection was made to the admissibility of said writings on the ground that “no authority or power was shown- to have been conferred upon the secretary, by resolution or otherwise, to assign the lease and contract. ’ ’

The court, in reply to this objection, said: “I am constrained to hold with the defendant upon this point, but will formally overrule the objection in order to hear the whole case.”

The contract and assignment having been under the indicated circumstances admitted in evidence, the plaintiff rested his case, and thereupon counsel for the defendant made a motion for a nonsuit on the ground that “no authority either by by-law or resolution of the board of directors of Bceles & Smith Company was shown in C. F. Bulotti, the secretary, to make the assignment. ’ ’ 'The motion was granted.

We think the granting of the nonsuit was erroneous. Although the court admitted the assignment in evidence subject to be stricken out later upon the ground of its incompetency to prove the fact of the alleged assignment, there is nothing in the record disclosing that the evidence was stricken out, and, so far as we are advised to the contrary by the record, it is there as -evidence in the ease and, conceding it to have been improperly admitted, it nevertheless constituted evidence which it was not only the duty of the court to consider but to assume to be true in passing upon the motion for a non-suit. (Zilmer v. Gerichten, 111 Cal. 73, 77, [43 Pac. 408] ; In re Daly, 15 Cal. App. 329, [114 Pac. 787] ; Goldstone v. Merchants’ Ice Co., 123 Cal. 625, [56 Pac. 776]; Estate of Arnold, 147 Cal. 583, [82 Pac. 252] ; Estate of Welch, 6 Cal. App. 45, [91 Pac. 336]; Mitchell v. Brown, 18 Cal. App. 117, 121, [122 Pac. 426], and oases therein cited.) The question of the credibility of the witnesses or the weight or competency of the evidence cannot, on such a motion, arise. (Mitchell v. Brown, 18 Cal. App. 117, [122 Pac. 426] ; Bush v. Wood, 8 Cal. App. 650, [97 Pac. 709].) 'The plaintiff testified that “the fact of this assignment to me was known to the president of the corporation. I had a meeting with the president, assistant *212 manager, and secretary of the corporation, in San Francisco, shortly before suit was commenced and they authorized me to come to Auburn and file the complaint and I did so. These men were directors of the corporation.” It was the duty of the court, in considering the motion, to give this testimony the benefit of its full probative force, and thus viewing it, the inference is clearly deducible therefrom that the assignment was duly and regularly executed by the corporation. Thus a prima facie showing was made by the plaintiff upon that question, and this is all that was required to justify the submission of the plaintiff’s ease upon its merits, so far as the ground upon which the motion was granted is concerned.

It was not necessary to the validity of the assignment that it should have been authenticated by the corporate seal of the corporation. Nor was it absolutely necessary to its legality that its execution should have been authorized by a resolution of the board of directors previously adopted. (Greig v. Riordan, 99 Cal. 316, [33 Pac. 913].) In that case it is said: “There was a period in the history of corporations when the most ordinary transactions were required to be authorized by solemn resolution of the board of trustee^, duly entered in their records, and authenticated by the corporate seal. With the multiplication of corporations having for their object nearly every business pursuit known to modern times the formalities previously regarded as necessary, and which were illy adapted to pursuits requiring prompt action, have been greatly abridged.” In the same opinion, the following, by Bronson, J., in Gillett v. Campbell, 1 Denio, (N.

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Bluebook (online)
131 P. 328, 21 Cal. App. 208, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leitch-v-marx-calctapp-1913.