Silberschmidt v. Moran

250 P. 205, 79 Cal. App. 533, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 22, 1926
DocketDocket No. 5193.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 250 P. 205 (Silberschmidt v. Moran) 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
Silberschmidt v. Moran, 250 P. 205, 79 Cal. App. 533, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 106 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J., pro tem.

Plaintiff, claiming to be the holder in due course of four certain negotiable certificates of deposit issued by the State Bank of Merrill, Michigan, payable to the defendant Thomas Moran, or order, each dated "February 16, 1921, and each for $1,000, brought this action to recover the face thereof, to wit: four thousand dollars, with interest, from defendants Thomas Moran and H. B. Eshleman as indorsers. The defendant Eshleman having absconded and not having been served with process, the action proceeded against the defendant-appellant Thomas Moran alone.

The defenses pleaded by the appellant were that there had been no notice of dishonor or protest; that plaintiff was not a holder in due course, and that plaintiff had become possessed of the certificates without consideration and in bad faith and through menace and duress practiced upon H. B. Eshleman, in whose hands the certificates of deposit had been placed by appellant to be used only in the purchase of certain real property in Los Angeles, and that the certificates of deposit had not been used for that purpose. The appellant asked for affirmative relief and to be adjudged the owner and entitled to the possession of the four certificates of deposit.

The court found that the instruments had not been protested as alleged and that plaintiff was not entitled to recover from defendant-appellant as an indorser, but did find that plaintiff was a holder in due course as against the affirmative defense of appellant and that plaintiff was the owner of the certificates of deposit and entitled to their possession and that she was entitled to recover costs. Judgment was made and entered by the court following these findings, and costs assessed against appellant.

Thereafter defendant-appellant duly moved for a new trial, and this having been denied, a bill of exceptions was prepared and this appeal prosecuted from the judgment.

The following is a summary of the facts as shown by the evidence:

The defendant H. B. Eshleman was a real estate agent engaged in that business in Los Angeles under the name of *536 “H. B. Eshleman Realty Company,” which was not a corporation and which was entirely owned by Eshleman, who signed as president.

The defendant-appellant Moran, who was the owner of the four certificates of deposit in question, was desirous of purchasing certain real property in Los Angeles, and for this purpose signed his name on the back of the certificates of deposit and left them, on February 24, 1921, with the H. B. Eshleman Re.alty Company in its escrow department according to certain escrow instructions. These instructions read in part as follows:

“I hand you at this date four certificates of deposit on the State Bank of Merrill, Michigan, for $1000 each, and being numbered Nos. 5971, 5972, 5973 and 5974 respectively, all of which you are authorized to use in connection with your escrow No. 4180 when you can secure for me a title guarantee on the property and premises situate Nos. 1723 to 1725% Ocean View Avenue, in the city of Los Angeles, being a four-family flat building, according to the legal description thereof, which will show that the record title to said property is vested in myself, Thomas Moran, a single man, free from incumbrances except ...”

The Eshleman Company was never able to secure a deed for Moran of this property. The certificates of deposit were not used by Eshleman for the purpose for which they were placed in escrow, but were on the same day that they were received—February 24, 1921—indorsed by Eshleman and then delivered by him to the plaintiff, to whom Eshleman was at the time indebted in the sum of $5,093.35.

The indebtedness of Eshleman to the plaintiff arose from the following transaction. In October and November, 1920, the plaintiff had entrusted the Eshleman Realty Company in its escrow department with $5,000 to purchase certain real property, according to certain escrow instructions given by the plaintiff. These instructions were never carried out, and the plaintiff demanded the return of her money. By December 20, 1920, she began to suspect the good faith of the transaction and placed the case in the hands of her attorney. With her brother, Dr. I. W. Traverse, she. called upon Eshleman a number of times and demanded the return of her money. On February 7, 1921, her attorney wrote Eshleman to the effect that the $5,000 placed in his hands *537 by the plaintiff was a trust fund and that from admissions which Bshleman himself had made to Dr. I. W. Traverse, Bshleman had been guilty of embezzlement—a very serious offense.

On February 23, 1921, plaintiff visited the office of Bshleman, demanded payment of the indebtedness with interest, and received from Bshleman a check for $5,093.35, drawn by Bshleman himself with instructions not to present it until the following day. The cheek was deposited by the plaintiff in the First National Bank of Los Angeles on February 23, 1921. The check was not honored on the 24th of February, 1921, payment thereof being refused by the bank upon which it was drawn, and upon being advised of this fact the plaintiff, her brother, Dr. I. W. Traverse, and her brother’s wife went at once to the office of Bshleman, met him as he was coming from his office, confronted him with the information that the check which he had given them was dishonored and demanded an explanation, and plaintiff told him. that unless he .settled this obligation at once she had given her attorney instructions to bring suit and attach his property immediately. Bshleman had the four certificates of deposit involved in this action in his hands, and he immediately turned them over to the plaintiff.

After receiving the certificates of deposit the plaintiff, on February 24, 1921, took them to the First National Bank of Los Angeles, and, after indorsing them, deposited them to her account in that bank. The First National Bank forwarded the certificates of deposit to the Corn Exchange National Bank, Chicago.

On March 2, 1921, the defendant Bshleman absconded, and H. W. Nesbit, who was in charge of the escrow department of the Bshleman Company, wired to the State Bank of Merrill, Michigan, to stop payment of the certificates of deposit, and payment was on that day stopped.

Appellant urges that the trial court erred: (1) In finding that there was a consideration given to the appellant for signing and delivering the certificates of deposit to the defendant Bshleman: (2) in finding that the plaintiff paid full or any consideration for the certificates of deposit; (3) in finding that the plaintiff was a holder in due course and received the certificates of deposit in good faith; (4) in finding that it was untrue' that the plaintiff procured the *538 certificates of deposit through menace; (5) in concluding that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment that plaintiff was the holder and owner of the certificates of deposit; (6) in concluding that plaintiff was entitled to judgment for costs.

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Bluebook (online)
250 P. 205, 79 Cal. App. 533, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silberschmidt-v-moran-calctapp-1926.