Pratt v. Hopper

55 P.2d 517, 12 Cal. App. 2d 291, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1028
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1936
DocketCiv. 9613
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 P.2d 517 (Pratt v. Hopper) 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
Pratt v. Hopper, 55 P.2d 517, 12 Cal. App. 2d 291, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1028 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

WHITE, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment entered against her in an action brought to recover a deficiency on a note secured by trust- deed aftpr the security was sold. This appeal involves only the defendants H. C. Hopper and Raleigh P. Trimble. As far as the defendants F. W. Payne and Mitchell Mayer are concerned, they are not involved in this appeal, the record indicating that defendant Payne has not been served with summons and that defendant Mitchell Mayer, also known as M. Numier, was served, failed to appear or plead in the action, and a default ¡judgment was entered against him.

Defendants Hopper and Trimble each interposed a general and special demurrer in the lower court. The demurrers were sustained without leave to amend as to the first and third *293 causes of action, and sustained as to the second cause of action with leave to amend. Upon failure of plaintiff to amend, a judgment was entered in favor of the respondent defendants herein.

Plaintiff’s amended complaint contained three causes of action, the first of which proceeds upon the theory that the defendants used the name of Mitchell Mayer as a trade or fictitious name to cover the transaction which they had jvith plaintiff; that they appointed and authorized Mitchell Mayer to act for them and each of them as agent, and that whatever transaction he consummated he consummated for all of them, jointly and severally; that the negotiations were carried on for Mitchell Mayer and the other defendants by Raleigh P. Trimble, and that he, Trimble, withheld from the plaintiff and refused to disclose to her the names of H. C. Hopper and F. W. Payne, two of the defendants, and who were the persons who really took over the premises in question and for whom the transaction was consummated.

As part of plaintiff’s complaint she attached thereto as exhibits the grant deed she executed to the defendant Mitchell Mayer to the real property in question; the deed of trust executed by Mitchell Mayer, grantee in the aforesaid deed, as trustor, to California Trust Company as trustee, and naming Mabel B. Pratt, grantor in the- aforesaid deed, as beneficiary; and also a grant deed executed to the property in question by Mitchell Mayer to the defendants Hopper and Payne. All the exhibits show that the defendant Mitchell Mayer signed in his individual capacity, and not as agent for the defendants. The exhibits do not show either that a trade name was used or that the parties thereto were copartners.

Section 3099 of the Civil Code reads as follows:

“3099. Liability on Instruments. No person is liable on the instrument whose signature does not appear thereon, except as herein otherwise expressly provided. But one who signs in a trade or assumed name will be liable to the same extent as if he had signed in his own name. ’ ’

The rule embodied in this section of the Civil Code is simply expressive of the law merchant. An undisclosed principal has been held liable except in eases of negotiable instruments and specialties, but the law seems well settled that in the case of negotiable instruments an undisclosed principal could not *294 be charged at any time. In the ease of negotiable instalments this restriction arises, not by reason of the status of fhe par-' ties, but by reason of the character of the instrument. When a negotiable instrument is executed by an agent without sufficiently indicating on its face who the principal is, patrol evidence cannot be introduced to charge the principal, although the agent executed the instrument as an agent. This exception to th§ rule is based upon the reason that each party who takes a negotiable instrument makes his contract with-t|he parties who appear on its face to be bound for its payment; and in suits upon negotiable instruments no evidence is admissible to charge any person as principal thereto unless his njame in some way is disclosed on the instrument itself.

This seems to be the uniform rule, and the necessity for uniformity in the interpretation and application of rules concerning negotiable instruments is commented on in Nelson Co. v. Morton, 106 Cal. App. 144, 149 [288 Pac. 845], where the court says:

" Justice Holmes has taught us, however, that law dóes not always keep step with logic. And in an attempt to penetrate the meaning of words or phrases of a statute affecting common business transactions, it is not wise to take more thought of the husk than of the corn in the husk. Much of the ¡confusion hitherto existing in the decisions, characterized by the United States Supreme Court in Falk v. Moebs, 127 U. S. 597 [8 Sup. Ct. 1319, 32 L. Ed. 266], as ‘the anarchy of the authorities’ and which led to the formulation of section 20 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, was caused by judicial blindness to mercantile usage and a straining after overni^e distinctions, which have served but to perplex the man of affairs. Upon questions affecting negotiable instruments it is far more important to have uniform rules than inerrant logic; and uniform laws must necessarily fail of their purpose unlessj there is uniformity in their interpretation and application. (Utah State National Bank v. Smith, 180 Cal. 1, 3, 4 [179 Pac. 160].)”

In 1923 the legislature amended section 3265 of the Civil Code to provide that the negotiability of a promissory note, otherwise negotiable in form, secured by a mortgage or deed of trust upon real or personal property, shall not be affected or abridged by reason of a statement therein that it is -so se *295 cured, nor by reason of the fact that said instrument is so secured, nor by any conditions contained in the mortgage or deed of trust securing the same.

The instrument in question here was therefore a negotiable instrument, and as the trial court appropriately announced in its memorandum decision sustaining the demurrers, “to hold that one can go behind the face of a negotiable promissory note to show the facts is to nullify section 3099, Civil Code’’. The demurrers as to the first cause of action were properly sustained without leave to amend.

The second cause of action proceeds upon the theory that plaintiff sold the real estate to the defendant Mitchell Mayer, taking part cash, the balance of the purchase price being represented by a note and trust deed, which real estate was in turn sold by Mitchell Mayer to the defendants Hopper and Payne; that said defendants, Hopper and Payne, bought the real estate in question from Mayer for $10,500, paying $3,000 cash, the balance of said purchase price to be made by the assumption on the part of Hopper, Payne and Trimble of the balance due and owing by Mitchell Mayer to the plaintiff, Mabel E. Pratt. The second cause of action, in other words, alleges that the defendants Hopper, Payne and Trimble became the parties primarily responsible to plaintiff, through the deal they had with Mayer, for the balance of the purchase price due from Mayer to the plaintiff under the original transaction between plaintiff and defendant Mayer.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.2d 517, 12 Cal. App. 2d 291, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-hopper-calctapp-1936.