Roush v. Kirkman

183 P. 353, 42 Cal. App. 115, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 718
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 8, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2845.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 183 P. 353 (Roush v. Kirkman) 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
Roush v. Kirkman, 183 P. 353, 42 Cal. App. 115, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 718 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

WASTE, P. J.

Plaintiff brought this action to collect a note for three thousand dollars, made by the defendants, who are engaged in the nursery business, to the First National Bank of Sanger, and which note was by the bank assigned to plaintiff. Defendants, answering, admitted the execution of the note, and alleged that the note, as delivered, contained on its back a guaranty of payment by the cross-defendants, E. H. Miller and Herbert Askin. Defendants deny that the bank sold, assigned, or delivered the note to plaintiff, or delivered the same to any other person than Miller, or Askin; deny that the plaintiff owns the note, and likewise deny that the note is unpaid, alleging that it has been fully paid by Miller and Askin.

By cross-complaint, by which said Miller and Askin are made cross-defendants, the defendants allege the making of an agreement of even date with the note, between themselves and the said Miller and Askin. In the agreement, which is set out in full, it is recited that the said cross-complainants are in need of certain money to carry on their nursery business; that said defendants and cross-complainants ■ will obtain three thousand dollars for that purpose from the First National Bank of Sanger, by means *117 of the promissory note in litigation here, a copy of the note, together with the guaranty by Miller and Askin being set up in the agreement; that, in consideration of the guaranty by Miller and Askin, defendants and cross-complainants agree to furnish “free gratis” to Miller and Askin two thousand trees of any variety which they may choose, then growing in the nursery of defendants and cross-complainants. In the event the nursery people have no available funds with which to dig and properly deliver the trees to Miller and Askin, the agreement continues, Miller and Askin are to advance the same. Furthermore, in case the latter advance any money for payment of interest on the note, they “shall, at their option, select from said nursery stock, so many trees as may be equivalent to the amount of money so advanced by them, allowing” the nursery people, defendants and cross-complainants, twenty cents (20c) per tree for each and every tree selected and taken by said parties, as therein provided. There is another stipulation to the effect that if the nursery people pay the note Miller and Askin shall be entitled to receive, and shall receive, two thousand trees only, and shall have the option of purchasing more trees for their personal use at a stipulated sum. It is agreed that if Miller and Askin are unable to accept the trees, the nursery people may continue to care for them until such time as, prior to August 1, 1916, Miller and Askin pay the sum of sixty dollars per thousand therefor. The latter are also given the right, on default of the nursery people, to enter the premises and select and secure the trees to which they may be entitled.

After setting forth the contract, the cross-complainants allege that it was the agreement of the parties, and that they intended that the agreement should mean, and its legal consequences be, that if Miller and Askin should advance any sums of money for the payment of the interest accrued, or the principal of the note, or for the digging and delivery of the trees, they “should reimburse themselves for such payment by selecting from the nursery stock of the cross-complainants so many trees as should be equivalent to the amount of money so advanced by them, at the rate of twenty cents per tree for each and every tree selected by the cross-defendants (Miller and Askin), and that the cross-defendants should be entitled to reim *118 bursement for moneys so advanced in the manner above stated, and in no other manner; . . . that the cross-defendants should reimburse themselves for all payments made to the First National Bank of Sanger on account of the promissory note, described in the agreement, or advanced to the cross-complainants as therein provided, only by the selection of nursery stock then and there owned by the cross-complainants as recited in the agreement; that the only option, or choice, intended to be given to the cross-defendants by said agreement was the option to select the ■ varieties or kinds of trees to be taken”; that the words “at their option,” hereinbefore quoted in referring to the agreement as pleaded, should have been omitted therefrom. The answers to the cross-complaint do not deny the execution of the agreement relative to the guaranty, but deny the alleged mutual mistake.

The trial court reformed the contract in accordance with the prayer of the cross-complaint. It found that the note was executed and delivered to the bank, bearing the indorsement and guaranty of Miller and Askin, in conformity with the real agreement of the parties; further, that Miller and Askin paid the same after maturity, and thereupon became entitled to select trees from the cross-complainants’ nursery stock, which trees defendants have always been ready to and have offered to deliver. This appeal is by the plaintiff and the cross-defendants, Miller and Askin, from the judgment entered in favor of the defendants in accordance with the findings. Appellants claim, first, that the evidence does not show a mutual mistake. ,

[1] “In revising a written instrument, the court may inquire what the instrument was intended to mean, and what were intended to be its legal consequences, and is not confined to the inquiry what the language of the instrument was intended to be.” (Civ. Code, sec. 3401.) Evidence of the purpose of the agreement, and of the negotiations leading up to its execution, is admissible for the purpose of showing what the parties intended. (Owsley v. Matson, 156 Cal. 401, [104 Pac. 983]; Horton v. Winbigler, 175 Cal. 150, [165 Pac. 423].) From the testimony quoted by the appellants in their opening brief it appears that respondents, J. L. Kirkman and J. A. Kirkman, W. M. Barr, cashier of the First National Bank of *119 Sanger, to whom the parties went to negotiate the loan, and who was first requested to draw the contract, and Monte Kirkman, son of one of the respondents, each testified that the contract intended by all the parties to be executed was the contract as found and reformed by the court. In opposition to their evidence, we find only the testimony of Mr. Miller, one of the cross-defendants. His more or less positive denial as to the intention of the parties raised merely a contradiction in the evidence, which was passed upon by the trial court. [2] It is true, as argued by appellant, that the evidence making out the mistake to the satisfaction of the court must be clear and convincing. “But, where the evidence, which tends to prove fraud or mistake, if standing alone, uneontradicted, is sufficiently clear and convincing, we cannot reverse the judgment on the ground that such evidence is contradicted by other evidence, because the right to pass upon the credibility of witnesses is not vested in this court. The only question which we have to decide in respect to the sufficiency of the evidence is whether that which tends to prove the alleged fraud or mistake, if standing alone, without contradiction, would make out a prima fade case.” (De Jarnatt v. Cooper, 59 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 353, 42 Cal. App. 115, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roush-v-kirkman-calctapp-1919.