Long Beach School District v. Lutge

62 P. 36, 129 Cal. 409, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 996
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1900
DocketL.A. No. 688.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 62 P. 36 (Long Beach School District v. Lutge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long Beach School District v. Lutge, 62 P. 36, 129 Cal. 409, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 996 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.

This action was brought to annul an order issued by the board of trustees of said school district to the county superintendent of schools, requiring him to draw a requisition upon the county auditor to draw a warrant against the high school fund for the amount of nine hundred and twelve dollars and eighteen cents “in favor of Theodore Lutge, or order, on account of and in full of third installment building contract,” and to enjoin the other defendants—the superintendent of schools, the county auditor, and the county treasurer, respectively—from making the requisition, drawing the warrant, or paying the same. Said order, so drawn and delivered by the said trustees to defendant Lutge, was -by him assigned and delivered to Charles H. Carey, receiver of the Willamette Steam Mill Lumbering and Manufacturing Company, who filed a complaint in intervention. Weidler, who succeeded Carey as receiver and was substituted for him, appeals from the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff canceling said order, and enjoining said officers as prayed by the plaintiff.

The ease was heard and submitted upon an agreed statement of facts, which was adopted by the court as its. finding, and which, so far as material, is as follows:

On August .25, 1897, plaintiff and Lutge entered into a contract for the erection of a school building by Lutge, the stipulated price being eleven thousand two hundred and sixty-nine dollars, to be paid in monthly installments of seventy-five per cent of the value of the work done, irrespective of materials *411 on the ground and not put in the structure, and based upon the contract price, the estimate to be made in writing by the architect. TJpon an estimate so made the order in question was made on December 6, 1897. Said contract—which is set out in full in the complaint—also required Lutge to execute to the plaintiff a bond in the sum of ten thousand dollars (a copy of which is set out in full in the intervenor’s complaint), and which is conditioned for the performance of the contract, to protect the plaintiff against liens, and also that Lutge would pay all his subcontractors, laborers, and materialmen all moneys that may become due to them, and providing that said bond-should inure to their benefit.
On December 8, 1897, Lutge, being indebted to the intervenor in the sum of eight hundred and twelve dollars and eighteen cents, upon two promissory notes which were secured by mortgage upon property covered by a prior mortgage, indorsed or assigned said order to Carey, who thereupon surrendered said notes and paid to Lutge one hundred dollars, that being the difference between the amount due on said notes and the amount of said order, and the release of the mortgage was forwarded to Portland, Oregon, to be executed by the intervenor, by Carey’s agent, who represented him in this transaction.
On the night of December 8th Lutge was arrested on a criminal charge, and was detained in custody, and was unable to prosecute work on the building, and, after notice to him, the trustees let a contract to another for the completion of the building for the sum of five thousand six hundred and fifty-eight dollars and fifty cents. There had been paid to Lutge, aside from the order here in question, five thousand six hundred and three dollars and eighty-two cents, and notice of several claims for material and labor were, after said order was assigned, presented to the trustees, amounting to four thousand one hundred and ninety-eight dollars and ninety-nine cents.

There was no allegation in the complaint, nor finding by the court, tending to show that the certificate of the architect was improperly issued, or that for any reason the order issued to Lutge was invalid when issued. The order was duly presented to the county superintendent on. the day of its transfer to the *412 intervenor, and the requisition was not then drawn upon the auditor for a warrant, solely for the reason that there was not on that day sufficient funds of the school district then in the treasury to pay the same. It is alleged in the complaint that, if there had been funds in the treasury applicable to that purpose, it would have been the duty of the county superintendent to have drawn the requisition, and of the auditor to issue the warrant, and of the treasurer to pay the same; and it is conceded that at the time the stipulation of the facts was made there were funds in the treasury applicable to the payment of the order sufficient to pay it.

It is contended by respondent that if this order had remained in Lutge’s hands that he would not be entitled to payment, because he had not performed his contract; that the amount required to complete the building, with what had been paid to Lutge, lacked only about seven dollars of being the entire contract price.

It is not necessary to consider or decide the question as to Lutge’s rights if he had retained the order. The sole question is as to the right of the intervenor, who is conceded to have paid for it by cash and the surrender of Lutge’s notes, as above stated.

That this order was assignable is not questioned by the respondent; nor is it questioned that in the absence of some equity then existing, or afterward arising, in favor of the plaintiff against Lutge, the intervenor acquired a legal title to the order, which he could enforce by a judicial proceeding.

Section 1459 of the Civil Code, however, expressly limits the equities to which a non-negotiable instrument is subject, in the hands of the assignee, to those “equities and defenses existing in favor of the maker at the time of the indorsement.”

The facts upon which respondent bases its contention that said order is charged, in the hands of the assignee, with an equity in favor of the plaintiff, are that after said assigament Lutge was arrested on a criminal charge and confined in jail; that upon notice to him, and his failure to provide for a continuance of the work, his contract was forfeited, and a contract let to another party for the completion of the building at a price exceeding, when added to the payments made to Lutge, the *413 original contract price by about the amount of the order here in question, and that materialmen, after Lutge abandoned the work, presented to plaintiff claims to a large amount for materials furnished to Lutge, and which it was claimed were not paid for. Ho other facts were alleged in the complaint or found by the court tending in any manner to show any equity affecting said order in the hands of the intervenor.

1. The presentation of these claims of materialmen created no liability against the school district which could increase its contract liability.

The contract, as we have seen, required monthly estimates to be made by the architect of the value of the work done, “independently of materials furnished and not then used in the building,” and the trustees were to draw a warrant in favor of the contractor for seventy-five per cent of such estimate.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P. 36, 129 Cal. 409, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-beach-school-district-v-lutge-cal-1900.