Rogers v. Kimball

53 P. 648, 121 Cal. 247, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 885
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1898
DocketL. A. No. 199
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 53 P. 648 (Rogers v. Kimball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Kimball, 53 P. 648, 121 Cal. 247, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 885 (Cal. 1898).

Opinions

VAN FLEET, J.

Appeal by the plaintiffs from a judgment in favor of defendants and from an order denying a new trial. The action is by and on behalf of Ella S. Rogers, the real party in interest, joining with her Thomas L. Rogers, her husband, to recover upon a certain contract of indemnity, set forth in the complaint. The complaint, after alleging the death of James S. Gordon, and the appointment of the defendant Jessie Gordon Whittlesey as administratrix of his estate, alleges in substance that on February 25, 1882, the plaintiffs and the defendants, Warren C. Kimball and Moses A. Luce, and said James S. Gordon, executed their promissory note for ten thousand dollars, payable to the order of the Consolidated Bank of San Diego six months after date, with interest, and that said bank afterwards indorsed said note to Bryant Howard; that plaintiff Ella S. Rogers signed said note at the request and for the accorfimodation of said Kimball, Luce, and Gordon; that on February 27, 1882, plaintiff Thomas L. Rogers conveyed and caused to be conveyed to said Luce, Kimball and Gordon a one-fifth interest in and to a certain concession made by the Mexican government of the right to construct a railroad to be known as the “Sonora and Baja California Railroad,” and that in consideration of said conveyance said Luce, Kimball and Gordon executed and delivered an agreement in writing, of which" the following is a copy:

[249]*249“We, the undersigned, for and in consideration of a conveyance to us, of even date herewith, of a one-fifth interest in and to the concession by the government of Mexico of the right to construct a railroad to be known as the Sonora and Baja California Railroad, do hereby assume all responsibility for the payment in full of a note of date February 25, A. D. 1882, made to the Consolidated Bank of San Diego, and signed by the undersigned, together with Thomas L. Rogers and Ella S. Rogers; hereby releasing from any payment thereon, as joint or several payors, the said Thomas L. Rogers and Ella S. Rogers; and hereby agreeing with the said Thomas L. Rogers and Ella S. Rogers to indemnify them in full for any loss or damage they may in any manner sustain on account of said note. Witness our hands this ,27th day of February, A. D. 1882.
“WARREN C. KIMBALL, ■
“JAMES S. GORDON,
“MOSES A. LUCE.”

And thereby agreed to and did release the plaintiffs from said note; that the said defendants and the said Gordon have paid no part of said note, except the sum of $3,333.33 paid by said , Kimball; that said Howard, to whom said note had been transferred by the bank, on the fifteenth day of May, 1886, brought suit thereon against the plaintiffs herein, Thomas L. Rogers .and Ella S. Rogers, and obtained judgment against them on the fourteenth day of March, 1889, for the sum of $7,019 damages and $63.12 costs; that on February 20, 1893, an execution thereon was issued, and on February 24, 1893, the plaintiff, Ella S. Rogers, paid out of her separate property, in full satisfaction of said judgment and execution, the sum of $7,100; that the plaintiffs are husband and wife; that Ella S. Rogers has demanded payment from the defendants of said sum, but no part of it has been paid, and judgment therefor in her favor is demanded.

The defendants Moses A. Luce and Jessie Gordon Whittlesey filed a joint answer in which they deny that Mrs. Rogers signed said note for their accommodation, or at their request,- and allege that defendants signed said note at the request and for the benefit of plaintiffs; deny that Thomas L. Rogers conveyed, or caused to be conveyed; said concession, or that in consideration ©f such conveyance they executed the agreement of indemnity [250]*250set out in the complaint; deny for want of information the allegations touching the judgment and execution and its satisfaction. For a second defense they allege that at the time they executed said indemnity agreement Thomas L. Rogers agreed to convey to Kimball, Luce, and Gordon a one-fifth interest in. said concession, and that said agreement to convey said interest was the consideration for the execution of the indemnity agreement by Kimball, Luce, and Gordon, and that Rogers never did convey, or cause to be conveyed, said interest; and upon information and belief allege that Rogers never had or owned, or could convey, any interest in said concession, whereby the consideration for their execution of the indemnity agreement wholly failed, and aver that they received no consideration whatever for the execution of said agreement. They also pleaded that plaintiff’s cause of action was barred by section 337 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Defendant Kimball answered separately, making substantially the same defense, so far as material to be considered, as that made by his codefendants.

The court found that the plaintiff Ella S. Rogers did not sign the note for the accommodation and at the request of the defendants, or either of them, but that she and the defendants signed at the request of the plaintiff Thomas L. Rogers; that said T. L. Rogers thereafter promised and agreed to convey, and cause to be conveyed, a one-fifth interest in the Mexican concession, and upon this consideration, and no other, the defendants executed the agreement sued upon, and that the plaintiff Thomas L. Rogers did not convey, or cause to be conveyed, said interest; that the plaintiffs did not, nor did either of them, pay or give any consideration whatever for the execution of said instrument; and it further found that prior to the nineteenth day of January, 1889, the note was fully paid and discharged. Upon these findings judgment was entered in favor of the defendants.

The appeal is based upon the one ground that the findings are not sustained by the evidence. Several of the findings are attacked by the specifications, but the material question in the case is, whether the evidence warrants the finding of a failure or want of consideration for the contract sued on, since if it does-the judgment must stand. It' is against this finding that the-[251]*251main effort of appellants is directed; but the assault proceeds upon lines largely, if not wholly, at variance with the case made by the complaint, and which the defendants were called upon to meet.

It is contended that the evidence shows without conflict that the plaintiff Ella S. Rogers was induced to sign the note in question by the promise of Luce, Kimball and Gordon to thereafter sign the indemnity agreement, and thereby hold her harmless from liability on the note; that this promise was a valuable consideration moving between her and the defendants, and that it is therefore immaterial as to her rights in the premises whether the consideration for the contract, as between her husband and defendants, failed or not; that when defendants executed the contract of indemnity they became liable upon the original promise, and are now estopped to deny that her signature to the noto was given for a valid and binding consideration. Hot only is this proposition not in line with the theory of the plaintiff’s case as made by the complaint, but it rests for its foundation upon the assumption of appellants that the evidence of Ella S. Rogers, as to the circumstances under which she signed the note and the causes inducing her thereto, stands uncontradicted, which very clearly appears from the evidence in the record is not the fact. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 P. 648, 121 Cal. 247, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-kimball-cal-1898.