Rankin v. Brown

20 P.2d 954, 131 Cal. App. 137, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 788
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1933
DocketDocket No. 843.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 P.2d 954 (Rankin v. Brown) 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
Rankin v. Brown, 20 P.2d 954, 131 Cal. App. 137, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 788 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

*138 BARNARD, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action brought to foreclose a mortgage in which the defense is based upon the fact that the makers of the mortgage never received the money represented thereby.

In the fall of 1928, the appellants, for the purpose of completing a building they were erecting, applied to the First National Bank in Bakersfield for a loan of $25,000, proposing to draw the money from time to time as they needed it, and to pay interest thereon only as the money was used. The application was referred by the bank to its discount committee, one member of which was a man named Fitzgerald, a director in the bank; who was also the manager of a building and loan association in the same city. The bank desired to accommodate the appellants but felt unable to do so, and Fitzgerald stated that he thought he could get them a private loan. Shortly thereafter, Fitzgerald called upon the appellants, who knew he was connected with the bank, and “seemed to know all about the loan and what the terms were”. Fitzgerald then called upon the respondent who had $25,000 to loan and, at his suggestion, the respondent went to see the appellants. The respondent refused to make the loan on the terms desired since he wanted interest paid on the full amount from the beginning, and the parties separated with the understanding that the transaction was terminated. Soon thereafter Fitzgerald again went to the respondent telling him that the money could be paid “to us and we will use it until Mr. Brown is ready for it and then we will pay the interest on it until then and he will pay it from then on”. The respondent stated that he did not wish to make the loan that way, that he wanted to, loan it to and have it secured by one or the other of them, but that he did not want to look first to one and then the other. Fitzgerald replied that this was the proposition and that the respondent was to pay them the money and they would use it until the appellants were ready for it, and they would settle the interest between them. Shortly thereafter Fitzgerald went to the appellants and told them he could get the money from the respondent and that “you just give me the papers and I will fix it all up and you won’t have to pay any interest until you draw the *139 money out of the bank, and it will be in the bank when you want it”. Either then pr soon after that the appellants signed the note and mortgage and delivered them to Fitzgerald.

The respondent went to Fitzgerald’s office and paid him $25,000 in currency. Fitzgerald told him that he had the papers all ready and would give him the note and mortgage as soon as the mortgage was recorded, and gave him a receipt for the money. As soon as the mortgage was recorded he delivered it to the respondent. The mortgage was recorded on October 8, 1928, and shortly thereafter the respondent told the appellants that he had paid the money in currency to Fitzgerald. Early in November the appellants wanted to use some of the money and called upon Fitzgerald for the same. Thereupon, Fitzgerald brought to them a note for $10,000 payable to the First National Bank in Bakersfield, explaining that they were not paying interest on the $25,000 until they began to draw on it, that they could use this $10,000 before drawing on the other money, and that when they began drawing the other money they could repay this $10,000 out of the first money drawn. The appellants signed this note and received that amount from the bank. At the time of signing this note they knew that it was payable to the bank, that the bank was loaning them that amount, that they were paying interest on it, and that the respondent had theretofore handed the original $25,000 to Fitzgerald. When the appellants received the $10,000 they told Fitzgerald they would probably want another payment in about a month, to which Fitzgerald replied: “Call me up three or four days before you want it”. About the first of December the appellants wanted more money and called upon Fitzgerald. They were told he was out of town. They called again and “could not get any satisfaction”. The appellant husband testified: “I could not see him at all, and the next thing I knew he was in bed with the flu, so I was told, for two weeks, and I called— in the meantime I called him over the phone and I said, ‘I need this money to meet these payments.’ ‘Well,’ he says, ‘You won’t have to pay interest, it will be all right’. He kept setting time, time and time again when it would be available, and he disappointed me every time, until it ran along way up in January and then I went after him, and I *140 went after him good. I went out to his house and saw him, and he says, ‘Well that money will be there day after tomorrow, it will be there’.” Shortly thereafter, Fitzgerald disappeared and it is conceded that he embezzled the money and that the same was never paid by him to the appellants.

While this is a hard case in the sense that a large loss must fall upon one of two innocent parties, and while it has been most ably argued by counsel on both sides, we feel that the decision of the trial court on a question of fact is controlling here. As conceded by appellants, the principal question to be decided is whether or not Fitzgerald had been authorized by the appellants to receive from the respondent the money in question. The trial court found that the respondent paid over and delivered $25,000 in cash to a person authorized and empowered by the appellants to receive said sum, and that this was done in consideration of the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage. While the appellants attack this finding as being no more than a conclusion of law it must be held sufficient in view of the language used in the pleadings and the form in which the issues were presented. The principal question before us then is whether or not the evidence sustains the finding and conclusion that Fitzgerald had been authorized by the appellants to receive the money.

The appellant E. H. Brown testified that Fitzgerald told them he could get ‘‘that money” from the respondent; that he said, ‘‘We can get that money and you make out the mortgage and let me have the papers and I will fix it all up and you make the mortgage to Rankin and the money will be in the Bank and there will be no other expenses. He says ‘you just give me the papers and I will fix it all up and you won't have to pay any interest until you draw the money out of the Bank, and it will be in the Bank when you want it’ ”; and that they gave him the papers. The appellant H. H. Brown testified as follows: ‘‘Q. In other words you understood when you gave Fitzgerald your note and mortgage, that Fitzgerald, in whatever capacity he was acting, to go and get that money from Rankin? A. I did not know he was going to get it. I supposed that money was to be placed in the bank because he said that was where I would find it when I wanted to use it. Q. That is what Mr. Fitzgerald said? A. Yes. Q. And you gave Mr. Fitz *141 gerald the note and mortgage ? A. Why certainly, we had to secure somebody for the money. Q. And you noticed, did you not, that the note and mortgage was made out to Mr. Rankin when you signed it? A. Well, I know it reads that way, but I don’t remember that note at all. I have racked my brain lots and I don’t remember that we ever signed that note, but it looks like our signatures and we probably did. Q. But you do remember signing the mortgage? A. Yes.

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.2d 954, 131 Cal. App. 137, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rankin-v-brown-calctapp-1933.