McDonough v. Nowlin

118 P. 463, 17 Cal. App. 45, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 8
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 30, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 815.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 118 P. 463 (McDonough v. Nowlin) 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
McDonough v. Nowlin, 118 P. 463, 17 Cal. App. 45, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 8 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

This is an action commenced by plaintiffs, as sureties, against the defendant, alleged to have been the principal in executing the obligation which was paid by plaintiffs.

The complaint alleges: That plaintiffs and defendant, on June 3, 1908, executed the joint and several promissory note set out in the complaint, which was payable to the Farmers and Mechanics’ Bank of Healdsburg, for the sum of $1,000; that the debt evidenced thereby was “the sole debt of the said defendant, and that the plaintiffs signed the same as sureties only, as an accommodation to him, and without any other consideration whatsoever, and upon the promise of said defendant that he would pay the whole of said debt evidenced by said promissory note”; that defendant paid the interest to December 3, 1909, “but nothing further of interest and no part of the principal has ever been paid”; that the said promissory note falling due and defendant failing to pay the same, plaintiffs “were compelled to and thereupon did” pay said promissory note, principal and interest; “that no part of said sum of $1,000, or of the interest thereon, has ever been repaid to plaintiffs or any of them, and that there is now due, owing and payable and unpaid from said de *47 fendant to the said plaintiffs, the aforesaid principal sum of $1,000 and interest thereon from the third day of December, 1909, at the rate of seven per cent per annum.” The prayer is for judgment for the sum of $1,000 and interest thereon from December 3, 1909, at the rate of seven per cent per annum, compounded semi-annually, and for costs of suit. Without demurring to the complaint, defendant answered by a general denial.

The court found the facts as alleged in the complaint; that defendant “borrowed and received from said bank the said sum of $1,000, all to his own sole use and benefit, and that the said plaintiffs did not, nor did either of them, at any time or at all receive or have any part of the same, or any use or benefit thereof”; that plaintiffs executed said promissory note as an accommodation to defendant and without other consideration'; that defendant paid the interest due on said promissory note up to December 3, 1909, but has paid nothing further; that said bank demanded payment of said note from plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs paid the same in full and interest thereon falling due after December 3, 1909.

Among the conclusions of law is one which is more a finding of fact than a conclusion of law—that, having paid the said promissory note, plaintiffs “are now the owners and holders of the same,” and that the principal thereof, together with interest thereon at the rate therein provided, “is due, owing and payable from said defendant to the said plaintiffs, and that they are entitled to judgment against said defendant therefor, together with their costs herein.”

The evidence was that the note referred to in the complaint was taken up by plaintiffs after its maturity and their joint and several note given in its stead and in payment, and that defendant has never paid to plaintiffs any part of the money borrowed by him on the note except interest up to December 3, 1909.

The principal point relied upon by appellant is that the plaintiffs mistook their remedy by bringing the action on the promissory note, which they claim to have paid, instead of counting upon the assumpsit which the law implies where a surety is compelled to advance money for his principal, as was held to be the correct procedure in Yule v. Bishop, *48 133 Cal. 574, [65 Pac. 1094], And it is further contended that the trial court fell into the same error as is shown by the finding referred to as part of the conclusions of law. That the rule is as laid down in the case cited is settled law in this state. The complaint is somewhat ambiguous and uncertain in this regard, and had the defendant raised the point by demurrer, no doubt the complaint would have been amended so as to remove any ambiguity or uncertainty in the pleading. It was said in the case cited, at page 380: “Under our system of pleading, where all the facts of the transaction are set out, it can make little difference in the generality of cases whether it be said that an accommodation maker or indorser who has been compelled to meet the obligation of his principal is entitled to sue upon the note, with a recovery limited to the amount he has expended, with legal interest, or whether it be said that his action is in assumpsit for money laid out on behalf of his principal, and that his recovery is measured by the amount he has so expended, with legal interest.” The facts of the transaction are set out in the present case with sufficient fullness to support a judgment under the rule laid down in Yule v. Bishop, 133 Cal. 574, [65 Pac. 1094],

The finding of the court that plaintiffs are the owners and holders of the promissory note and are entitled to judgment against defendant therefor was a superfluous and unnecessary finding. The other findings of fact are supported by the evidence and are sufficient to support the judgment.

The objection that the evidence failed to show payment of the note by plaintiffs because the giving by them of their note was not such payment as entitled them to recover from defendant is not well founded. Where a surety or accommodation indorser has paid the note of his principal by executing his own note to the holder, and it is accepted in payment and extinguishment of the first note, he has an action to recover the amount of the first note from the defendant as for money paid for his use, though his own note was not paid at the time of the trial. (Stanley v. McElrath, 86 Cal. 449, [25 Pac. 16, 10 L. R. A. 545].)

It is further- contended that plaintiffs had a chattel mortgage on “one Standard Mergenthaler Linotype, and one *49 Hoe Cylinder Printing Press,” as collateral security to secure them against the payment of the note to the bank, and that it was plaintiffs’ first duty to exhaust this security before an action would lie on the implied obligation here involved.

For some inscrutable reason plaintiffs submitted in evidence a certain agreement in writing of date May 14, 1908 (prior to the execution of the note), which appears to have been a conditional agreement of certain parties to become sureties for defendant in securing a loan of $1,500. Plaintiffs also introduced in evidence an instrument in writing which has the semblance of a chattel mortgage on “One Standard Mergenthaler Linotype, and one Hoe Cylinder Printing Press,” executed by defendant and bearing date January 30, 1909, several months after the execution of the note set out in the complaint. Plaintiffs contend that this mortgage is of no validity, because of defects in its form and in the manner of its execution. They also claim that in any event defendant cannot avail himself of the mortgage because he did not set it up as a defense. But it is in the case and at plaintiffs’ instance and cannot be ignored.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 P. 463, 17 Cal. App. 45, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonough-v-nowlin-calctapp-1911.