Montgomery v. Dorn

145 P. 148, 25 Cal. App. 666, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 201
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 5, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1295.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 145 P. 148 (Montgomery v. Dorn) 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
Montgomery v. Dorn, 145 P. 148, 25 Cal. App. 666, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 201 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

In plaintiff’s amended complaint it is alleged that defendant Fitch executed his promissory note to plaintiff, September 26, 1908, for the sum of one thousand three hundred and sixty dollars, payable ninety days after date, with interest after maturity, secured by certain shares of Home Circle Cash Store & Mail Order House, a corporation; that, after the execution of said promissory note and prior to the commencement of the action, defendants Dorn and Rankin ‘ ‘ expressly and in writing undertook, agreed and promised the said Chas. A. Fitch, for a good and valuable consideration moving to them, and to each of them, to pay the said promissory note and the whole thereof for the express benefit of plaintiff herein and said undertaking, agreement and promise has at no time been rescinded. ’ ’

The prayer is for judgment against defendants for one thousand three hundred and sixty dollars, with interest at seven per cent after December 26, 1908, and that said pledged property be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of said indebtedness and for general relief.

Defendant Rankin interposed a general and special demurrer to the amended complaint which, being overruled, he answered by expressly denying its averments. Defendant Dorn answered and, on information, denied most of the averments of plaintiff’s amended complaint and, by way of answer thereto, set forth what he alleged to be the facts in the transaction, to wit: that, on or about September 7, 1909, as agent and attorney of Rankin and not otherwise, he entered into a written agreement (plaintiff’s Exhibit 3) to purchase for Rankin from defendant Fitch and one H. McDonald certain shares of said corporation, referred to in plaintiff’s complaint, and in consideration of the transfer of said stock by Fitch and McDonald to Rankin, the said Rankin promised and agreed to pay for said shares certain cash to Fitch and to liquidate certain designated claims and among them the said claim of plaintiff; that in pursuance of said contract said shares were transferred to Rankin and Rankin paid to Fitch the amount agreed, to wit, one hundred and fifty dollars, and one other claim, but did not pay certain other claims nor did he pay the said claim of plaintiff; that he, Dorn, acted solely *669 as agent and attorney of Rankin and so informed defendant Pitch and said McDonald and “that said defendant A. J. Rankin was the principal in said contract and that the defendant, Walter B. Dorn, was but the agent and attorney for said party”; that in pursuance of said contract said Rankin became the sole owner of said stock of said corporation.

The court gave judgment for plaintiff against defendants Pitch and Rankin for the sum of one thousand three hundred and sixty dollars and interest at seven per cent from December 29, 1908, and directed that the said shares be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of said amount and that the action be dismissed as to defendant Dorn. Defendant Rankin alone appeals from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a, new trial.

Upon sufficient evidence the court found that the averments of the amended complaint were true and that the averments of defendant Rankin’s answer were not true. Specifically, and on sufficient evidence, it found that Pitch executed the promissory note as alleged and pledged the said shares as alleged and as testified to by defendant Pitch and that no part of said promissory note has been paid; that the transaction by which defendant Rankin became liable for the payment of said promissory note was substantially as alleged in defendant Dorn’s answer and as testified to by him; that Dorn was acting solely as Rankin’s agent and attorney and by his direction and with his knowledge and consent and that, pursuant to said written agreement entered into by Dorn, Rankin paid certain of the claims therein agreed by him to be paid but that he did not pay plaintiff’s said claim; that Dorn received no profits or benefits from said transaction and that “defendant A. J. Rankin received all the benefits and profits accruing from said contract, and was and is the principal thereunder. That defendant, A. J. Rankin, received valuable and sufficient considerations for the execution of said contract of October 7, 1909, as hereinafter set forth.” Finding numbered 7 is as follows: “That defendant A. J. Rankin, after the said execution and delivery of said promissory note, ... to wit, on or about October 7, 1909, expressly and in writing, undertook, agreed and promised the said Charles A. Pitch for a good and valuable consideration moving to him, to pay the said promissory note owing from said C. A. Pitch to plaintiff and the whole thereof for the express benefit of plaintiff *670 herein, and said undertaking, agreement and promise has at no time been rescinded. ’ ’

1. Appellant’s first proposition is that there is a fatal variance between paragraph IV of the complaint and the findings thereon,—namely, finding 7. This paragraph stated that Walter E. Dorn and A. J. Rankin “expressly and in writing undertook, agreed and promised the said Charles A. Fitch for a good and valuable consideration moving to them, and to each of them, to pay said promissory note and the whole thereof, for the express benefit of the plaintiff.” The claim is that “both Dorn and Rankin undertook in writing to pay said promissory note and that both received consideration therefor, while the findings, based upon the evidence as it was viewed by the court, are that A. J. Rankin alone ‘expressly and in writing undertook, agreed and promised’ to pay said promissory note.” (Citing People v. Cummings, 117 Cal. 497, [49 Pac. 576].) In that case the indictment charged that the note was obtained by false pretenses describing the notes as having been executed by one person as maker, but the proofs showed that the note was executed by two persons as joint makers, and the variance was held material. No such ease appears here. It was not alleged that Dorn and Rankin jointly executed the agreement and it was not found that Rankin “alone” entered into the agreement, but rather that he, through his agent, Dorn, entered into it.

Dorn was, on the face of the agreement, a principal while in fact he was the agent of the undisclosed principal. “The general rule is that where the contract is made by an agent within the scope of his employment, both the agent and the undisclosed principal, when discovered, are liable on the contract, and may be joined as defendants thereon.” (31 Cyc., p. 1624.) It was not necessary to aver the fact of agency, “it being sufficient to charge the act as that of the principal, without disclosing the fact of the agency” (Id., p. 1626) ; and where “the proof is that such acts were done or knowledge obtained by his authorized agent, there is no variance. ” (Id., p. 1638.) Rankin was shown by the evidence to have been the undisclosed principal and was properly joined with Dorn as party defendant and as to Rankin a good cause of action was stated, Rankin was, therefore, not prejudiced, whether or not a judgment went against Dorn. (Allen v. Globe. Grain & Milling Co., 156 Cal. 286, 291, [104 Pac. 305].)

*671 2.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P. 148, 25 Cal. App. 666, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-dorn-calctapp-1914.