Morrison v. J. D. Willhoit

145 P.2d 707, 62 Cal. App. 2d 830, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 881
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1944
DocketCiv. 14247
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 145 P.2d 707 (Morrison v. J. D. Willhoit) 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
Morrison v. J. D. Willhoit, 145 P.2d 707, 62 Cal. App. 2d 830, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 881 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

From a judgment denying relief to plaintiff in her action on two promissory notes, plaintiff appeals. * The execution of the notes was admitted, but after denying all other material allegations of the complaint, defendants pleaded affirmatively: (1) the notes were given in connection with a transaction whereby plaintiff on September 10, 1929, transferred certain properties for the benefit of the Marine Building and Loan Association of San Pedro, hereafter referred to as Marine, for the purpose of delaying and defrauding her creditors; (2) on September 15, 1933, plaintiff instituted an action in the Superior Court at Long Beach to cancel the notes and trust deeds given to Marine in the original transaction on the ground of fraud, which action was decided adversely to her; and (3) the institution of the action in Long Beach demanding the cancellation of the transfers of September, 1929, and the payment of the moneys she had placed with the defendants herein constituted an election of rescission as her remedy as well as a declaration that the notes here in suit were due and owing, and therefore the present action is barred by such election as well as by the statute of limitations.

In September, 1929, plaintiff owned a number of valuable properties in Los Angeles County. Prior to that time and for more than two years plaintiff had transacted business with Marine, and at that time maintained on deposit with that company in excess of $5,000. During the period prior to September, 1929, plaintiff sought the advice of Willhoit and Gibson, president and secretary respectively of Marine, with reference to her business transactions and the management of her properties. Such advice was given by defendants in the discharge of their duties as officers of Marine. In September, 1929, plaintiff was about to be made defendant in cer *834 tain litigation in which she feared an adverse judgment. She sought the advice of defendants for the purpose of determining npon a method of protecting her property against sale under execution in the event that her adversary should prevail. An arrangement was agreed upon whereby plaintiff executed and delivered to Marine nine certain promissory notes aggregating $40,000, and to secure same she executed and delivered her several deeds of trust in favor of Marine as beneficiary. On the same day defendants, as officers of Marine, issued checks in the sum of $39,168.50, the difference evidently being the compensation of Marine for the services of Willhoit and Gibson. Those gentlemen caused plaintiff to indorse the checks which defendants promptly cashed. On the same day defendants executed their notes to plaintiff in the aggregate sum of $40,000 but gave no security. These notes were evidently given as contemporaneous proof of the possession of plaintiff’s money by defendants, but no change in their relation of principal and agents was intended. Under the arrangement defendants deposited plaintiff’s money with Marine in account No. 2300 under “Willhoit and Gibson” and used it to pay taxes and expenses of plaintiff. All sums withdrawn from this account were paid solely for the use and benefit of plaintiff.

. About the 10th of March, 1931, defendants and their wives executed to plaintiff the two notes here in suit aggregating $31,625.59 as evidence of the balance of her money in the treasury of Marine. Aside from the execution of the notes nothing in the findings or in the evidence indicates that the parties intended thereby to evidence the personal debt of Willhoit and Gibson so long as they acted in good faith as plaintiff’s agents in handling her money. On the 6th of June, 1933, the Building and Loan Commissioner of California, as receiver, took charge of Marine and thereafter administered its affairs. In her action filed in the Superior Court at Long Beach on September 15, 1933, plaintiff sought the cancellation of her nine notes to Marine of September 10, 1929, to the extent that the moneys evidenced thereby had not been expended for her account and for the cancellation of the deeds of trust given at the same time to secure such notes. The bases of her Long Beach action were: (1) that the litigation with which she had been threatened had heen terminated and she was therefore entitled to have the balance of her money returned to her and the deeds of trust can- *835 celled; and (2) that she had been undnly persuaded by Willhoit and Gibson to execute such instruments.

In the Long Beach action plaintiff sued Marine, the receiver of Marine, and Willhoit and Gibson. Judgment of dismissal was rendered after the court had sustained a demurrer that the complaint failed to state a cause of action. The judgment was entered on March 27, 1934. Thereafter the receiver of Marine in the execution of his official duties foreclosed the trust deeds of September, 1929, and applied all the moneys in its treasury to the uses of Marine.

The present action was filed on July 19, 1941. The court found against plaintiff on all of her allegations, namely: defendants induced plaintiff to transfer her property to defendants ; her property had been disposed of by defendants for their own use; defendants have neglected to pay any part of the notes; defendants had no intention of ever paying the notes but intended to dispose of the property for their own uses; the making of the original notes was a scheme to obtain the property of plaintiff fraudulently or otherwise without intending to pay the value or the amount evidenced by the promissory notes; the notes in suit had not been completely discharged; the properties were not conveyed to defendants at the instance and request of plaintiff; defendants had not dealt with the properties in the manner directed by plaintiff. It was also determined that it was not true that defendants failed to pay plaintiff the moneys evidenced by the original promissory note, or that they had no intention of paying the same, but because of the facts found, the notes in suit have been completely paid and discharged.

On the affirmative defenses it was found: (1) that the Long Beach action had resulted adversely to plaintiff in favor of defendant Willhoit and that such judgment constitutes res judicata of the present action; (2) that the Long Beach judgment disposed of all rights of plaintiff, including her right to declare the notes to be in default and the whole thereof to be due plaintiff, and that by reason whereof her action on the two notes is barred by subdivision 1 of section 337, Code of Civil Procedure; and (3) that, by virtue of filing the Long Beach action, plaintiff elected to pursue her remedy for cancellation of the notes and therefore she is now estopped, precluded and barred from recovering on them.

(1) The finding that the notes in suit have been dis *836 charged spells finality for the action. The sufficiency of the evidence to support that finding is open to view. Plaintiff’s declaration in her Long Beach action shows that she sought an arrangement with defendants whereby she might conceal her property from her anticipated creditor. Her first effort was to encumber her titles. To do this effectually she must obtain a consideration for such encumbrances. This she obtained from Marine, a loan of $40,000.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P.2d 707, 62 Cal. App. 2d 830, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-j-d-willhoit-calctapp-1944.