Schomaker v. Petersen

285 P. 342, 103 Cal. App. 558, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 949
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1930
DocketDocket No. 6968.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 285 P. 342 (Schomaker v. Petersen) 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
Schomaker v. Petersen, 285 P. 342, 103 Cal. App. 558, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 949 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J., pro tem.

This is an action based on a promissory note executed to the plaintiff by the defendants J. B. Petersen and S. Matthesen, together with their respective wives, and at all times after its delivery kept by plaintiff in her own exclusive possession.

The question presented on this appeal by plaintiff concerns itself with the authority of a real estate agent, who had negotiated the transaction giving rise to the note, to *561 bind the payee by receipt of a payment procured on such agent’s own solicitation, and misappropriated by him.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Schomaker, acting through E. B. Field, doing a brokerage business in Oakland under the trade name of E. B. Field Co., sold to Messrs. Petersen and Matthesen a lot of land, taking as part payment a promissory note for $1900, executed by all the defendants and secured by their deed of trust. The sale was closed by an employee of Field, named Fred Hauschildt; and the note, with the deed of trust, was duly delivered to the plaintiff and has been retained ever since in her possession.

The note, which was dated October 29, 1923, was made payable one year thereafter, and bore interest .at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable monthly, and compounding if not so paid. The trustee named in the deed of trust was the Oakland Title Insurance & Guarantee Company; and the instrument was recorded November 14, 1923.

Mrs. Schomaker, who is described by Mr. "Sevier, deputy district attorney of Alameda County, as an ignorant woman, appears to have had no business experience; and, moreover, she was occupied with the care of a helpless son. A period of six months having gone by without any interest being-paid, she informed Hauschildt of the default. He told her that he would procure the interest money; and soon thereafter, on March 3, 1924, he obtained from Petersen a check for $66.60, which Petersen drew in favor of Hauschildt, and the latter, after giving Petersen a receipt for interest from October 25, 1923, to April 25, 1924, sent his own personal cheek for $66 to Mrs. Schomaker.

On August 15, 1924, Hauschildt, acting on his own initiative, procured from Matthesen a check for $66 in Hauschildt’s favor, receipting for the amount as “six months interest on loan of $1,900 to Margaret Schomaker from March 29, 1924, to August 29, 1924.” Mrs. Schomaker had no knowledge of this payment, nor did she receive any of the proceeds of the check.

At about this time Hauschildt chanced to see Mrs. Schomaker and stated to her that the makers of the note were getting ready to pay her, whereupon she remarked that “that was all right.” She heard no more of the matter until the following September, at which time Hauschildt told her that the makers were in position to pay her, but that she *562 would have to sign a reconveyance; and he asked her if she would do so. She replied that she would, if she had to sign in order to get her money; and he then said that he would mail the paper to her for signature.

Shortly thereafter Hauschildt sent to plaintiff by mail a form which in express terms directed the Oakland Title Insurance and Guarantee Co. to execute and deliver a reconveyance of the property described in the deed of trust executed by the defendants. Nothing was mentioned in these instructions concerning any collection to be made, nor was delivery of the reconveyance made conditional upon payment of the note. But in his letter to Mrs. Schomaker, Hauschildt said: “If you will kindly sign this and mail same back to me, I will see that the money is deposited in the Oakland Title Insurance and Guarantee Co. and mailed to you.” Mrs. Schomaker accordingly signed the form, and mailed it back to Field’s office in an envelope which came with the letter to her. The instructions were then delivered, presumably by . Hauschildt, to the trustee; and on November 12, 1924, the trustee, without inquiring as to payment of the indebtedness, had a deed of reconveyance signed by its officers, using one of its ordinary forms, which recited payment of the indebtedness in full. This document then passed, without any direction from Mrs. Schomaker, into the possession of Hauschildt in some way not disclosed in the evidence. It was not recorded until February 25, 1925.

Before procuring from Mrs. Schomaker the instructions to the trustee, Hauschildt, by false representations, had already induced Petersen and Matthesen to pay to him $1815 of the principal amount of the indebtedness. In September he represented to Petersen that Mrs. Schomaker was greatly in need of money; and that if Petersen could help her, she would deduct $50 from the amount owing. Petersen, without any inquiry concerning either the possession of the note or Hauschildt’s authority to collect the indebtedness, gave Hauschildt a check on September 19, 1924, for $890, and had Matthesen, on October 22, 1924, give Matthesen's check to Hauschildt for $925. These checks were both drawn in favor of Hauschildt, and were cashed by him. At the time of the delivery of Petersen’s check, Hauschildt promised that he would get a reconveyance on payment of the residue; and when he received Matthesen’s check, he said the recon *563 veyance would, be sent in a few days. After procuring the reconveyance from the trustee, Hauschildt gave it to Petersen on November 14, 1924, and at the same time demanded and received from Petersen a check for $33, which Hauschildt stated was for interest and the expense incident to execution of the reconveyance. This amount, together with the moneys previously collected by Hauschildt, aggregated $1980.60, all of which Hauschildt appropriated to his own use, with the exception of the item of $66 sent in March, 1924, to Mrs. Schomaker as a payment of interest for the first six months.

After Mrs. Schomaker had signed the instructions to the trustee she heard nothing further from anyone, and waited until March, 1925. At that time she telephoned to Hauschildt, who told her that nothing had been paid, that failure to make payment was mere carelessness, and that the money was perfectly safe and the security ample. Thus reassured, and her attention being centered on her helpless son, Mrs. Schomaker let matters drift until the following October, at which time she again made inquiry of Hauschildt, and was told as before that nothing had yet been paid. So matters went on with repeated inquiries and reassurances for about, a year until October, 1926. Being then in need of money, Mrs. Schomaker communicated with a friend, who suggested that she make inquiry of the Oakland Title Insurance and Guarantee Co. Upon doing so, Mrs. Schomaker learned that a deed of reconveyance had been made and recorded long before; and she was advised to see Mr. Field. This she did, and then sought out Mr. Petersen also, whom she had never met previously; and from him learned that payments had been made to Hauschildt.

Hauschildt had been discharged from Field’s employ on September 1, 1926, and thereupon became connected with the real estate office of Tucker-McElhinney Co. Upon being informed of the misconduct of Hauschildt, Field brought the matter to the attention of Mr. Sevier, deputy district attorney, who issued a citation requiring Hauschildt’s attendance at the district attorney’s office. Two meetings were held. Besides Hauschildt and Sevier, there were present at both meetings Field, Petersen, Matthesen and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
285 P. 342, 103 Cal. App. 558, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schomaker-v-petersen-calctapp-1930.