Miller v. Ambassador Park Syndicate

9 P.2d 267, 121 Cal. App. 92, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1188
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 19, 1932
DocketDocket No. 7096.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 9 P.2d 267 (Miller v. Ambassador Park Syndicate) 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
Miller v. Ambassador Park Syndicate, 9 P.2d 267, 121 Cal. App. 92, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1188 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

From a judgment rendered against it and others, in favor of plaintiff, the defendant Ambassador Park Syndicate and certain individual defendants appeal to this court.

As far as concerns the complaint in the action, it is based upon a non-negotiable promissory note which was executed by the defendant syndicate in favor of plaintiff’s assignor, but the facts upon which the several defenses to the action are founded are numerous and somwhat complicated. As *95 each of the several specifications of error herein receives consideration by this court, wherever deemed necessary or advisable, the pertinent facts applicable thereto will be briefly set forth.

It is first urged by appellants that because in its findings of fact the trial court declared that each of three designated individuals was a trustee of the defendant syndicate, when, as adduced by the evidence, neither of such named persons was in fact a trustee thereof,—the judgment should be reversed. It is a familiar rule applicable particularly to the legal propriety of granting a new trial, or to the reversal of a judgment, that not only must error be shown to have been committed, but as well that in some substantial manner prejudice has resulted to the basic rights of the aggrieved party. Although herein appellants have made no effort in the way of directing attention to the possible ultimate effect which the alleged objectionable finding may have had upon the mind of the judge of the trial court in reaching a conclusion with reference to other important findings in the ease,—from a consideration of the entire evidence relative to the findings which are claimed to have been influenced by the finding in question, it becomes apparent that the questioned finding was lacking in potency and that its effect, if any, was negligible. It follows that the position assumed by appellants in that regard is not sustainable.

It is next urged that the finding made by the trial court to the effect that the promissory note upon which the action was based was delivered to the payee thereof was not supported by the evidence. No such express finding of fact appears in the record herein. From an examination of the pertinent evidence it appears that the promissory note was never placed in the actual physical possession of the payee thereof. However, the fact, as in substance was found by the trial court, that immediately following its execution, which took place in the presence of the payee, by the implied consent of both parties thereto the note was placed in escrow in the possession of a third person,—considering the passing of the events upon the happening of which the payee of the note became entitled to its possession, constituted an effective legal delivery of the note to its payee. Without herein setting forth the facts upon which are *96 predicated the findings made by the trial court relative to the conditions of said escrow of the promissory note, and upon the fulfilment thereof the ensuing right of its payee to its delivery to him, it may suffice to state that in the opinion of this court the objection presented by appellants relative to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain such findings is lacking in legal merit and therefore cannot be sustained. Based upon like conditions appearing in the transcript of the evidence adduced on the trial of the action, must also fail each of the several objections to certain other findings of fact urged by appellants referring specifically to the notice by respondent to appellants of the assignment of the promissory note by its payee to plaintiff; the lawful ownership by plaintiff of the promissory note and the ensuing right by him of its physical possession; and for a certain period, in derogation of plaintiff’s rights in the premises, the withholding of possession of the promissory note from plaintiff by the appellant syndicate and its trustees, and thereafter the like withholding from plaintiff of such promissory note by one Joseph Musgrove—all for the purpose of preventing plaintiff from “obtaining the money described in the note”.

One of the defenses to the action pleaded by the defendants in substance was that plaintiff’s assignor was indebted to the defendant Ambassador Park Syndicate in a much larger sum of money than was owing by it to the payee of the promissory note. In pleading such defense a wealth of evidentiary, as well as pertinent ultimate facts, were alleged. By its finding of fact, instead of treating separately each ultimate fact respectively so alleged in the answer of the defendants, the trial court contended itself in that regard with a blanket finding “that no proof was adduced before the court that the defendant DuBain (the payee of the note) was indebted to the Ambassador Park Syndicate, a common law trust, or its trustees, at any time in any amount”. With reference thereto it is here contended by appellants that the finding made by the trial court “does not amount to a finding that the facts pleaded by defendant Ambassador Park Syndicate by way of set-off are untrue”. However, from a consideration of the questioned finding, as well as of other findings made by the trial court, it at once becomes apparent that had the court *97 made specific findings on each of the several issues of ultimate fact in that regard tendered by the answer of the defendants, such findings and each of them necessarily would have been against and contrary to the allegations of fact contained in said answer. In this state the rule repeatedly has been announced that when the record discloses the fact that, although the trial court has failed to find on a material issue, if it also appear that had a finding been made on such issue it would have been adverse to the contentions advanced by the appellant, the judgment of the lower court should not be disturbed^ because of such omission. (Hutchings v. Castle, 48 Cal. 152, 156; People v. Center, 66 Cal. 551, 564 [5 Pac. 263, 6 Pac. 481]; McCourtney v. Fortune, 57 Cal. 617, 620; Winslow v. Gohransen, 88 Cal. 450, 452 [26 Pac. 504] ; Demartin v. Demartin, 85 Cal. 71, 75 [24 Pac. 594]; Southern Pac. R. R. Co. v. Whitaker, 109 Cal. 268, 274 [41 Pac. 1083]; Reed v. Johnson, 127 Cal. 538, 541 [59 Pac. 986]; Craig v. Gray, 1 Cal. App. 598, 601 [82 Pac. 699]; Gerth v. Gerth, 7 Cal. App. 735, 737 [95 Pac. 904]; U. S. Trading Corp. v. Newmark G. Co., 56 Cal. App. 176, 191 [205 Pac. 29]; Lincoln v. Hoggard, 66 Cal. App. 196, 199 [225 Pac. 770]; Rossiter v. Thompson, 66 Cal. App. 491, 498 [226 Pac. 809]; Platt v. Okamoto, 95 Cal. App. 297, 298 [272 Pac. 613].)

But it is clear that such a conclusion does not necessarily prejudice the further point advanced by appellants, to wit, that the finding to the effect that plaintiff’s assignor was not indebted to the Ambassador Park Syndicate is not supported by the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.2d 267, 121 Cal. App. 92, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-ambassador-park-syndicate-calctapp-1932.