Szczotka v. Idelson

228 Cal. App. 2d 399, 39 Cal. Rptr. 466, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1527
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 9, 1964
DocketCiv. 27698
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 228 Cal. App. 2d 399 (Szczotka v. Idelson) 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
Szczotka v. Idelson, 228 Cal. App. 2d 399, 39 Cal. Rptr. 466, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1527 (Cal. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

LILLIE, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment declaring void and usurious a $60,000 note owned by them, as well as a second trust deed securing such obligation on certain motel property belonging to plaintiffs. 1 The judgment also permanently enjoined defendants from seeking the remedy of foreclosure otherwise available to them.

The subject litigation had its genesis in a three-cornered deal occurring in 1959. The pretrial order properly notes that the “case is somewhat complicated.” In October or November of that year, the defendants employed one LaSatier, a real estate broker, to exchange their equity in an apartment building for a note and second trust deed. Mr. Idelson testified that “to be considered as a trade for tax purposes, it would have to show a three-way deal”—LaSatier would be a principal, as would Idelson and the party who eventually bought the Idelsons ’ equity. The subject $60,000 note was brought by LaSatier to Mr. Idelson’s attention; bearing date *402 of November 11, 1959, it was issued by F. C. Foster & Co. in favor of Oxwood Properties, Inc. An escrow at Wilshire Escrow Company was opened at the end of November for the purchase of this note. The escrow instructions fixed the payment price at $46,200. (This money was made available to defendants by LaSatier’s sale of their equity to one Traub.)

In June of 1959, meantime, plaintiffs had opened an escrow at Occidental Escrow for the sale of their property to Foster. The subject note became part of that transaction. As amended in October of that year, the instructions provided that the sale would be subject to Lincoln Savings’ first trust deed in the sum of $200,000, the balance of the purchase price ($230,083.61) to be represented by a note and trust deed in plaintiffs’ favor. Plaintiffs, however, agreed that Foster could further encumber the property by a $60,000 note and trust deed {the instruments here in suit) to which, although subject to Lincoln’s first trust deed, they would subordinate their own note and trust deed. The pertinent clause provided for the subordination of plaintiff’s second trust deed “to a new loan of $60,000. ...” There was testimony that plaintiffs consented to the above subordination because Foster needed money for the development costs of certain property in Santa Maria; there was also testimony that plaintiffs were to receive a note and trust deed on the Santa Maria property as additional security for the sale of their motel.

The ease turned in considerable part on the manner in which the subject note was created. According to defendants, Foster owed Oxwood money and, to satisfy such obligation, executed the note and trust deed on November 11, 1959. The instrument was not, however, recorded until December 9. Also on November 11, there were recorded fractional assignments of the note and trust deed to one Mooshey and one Bueh, being collateral for funds advanced in connection with the preliminary development of the Santa Maria property. When Oxwood sold the note to LaSatier, it received “approximately $42,000” in payment; from this money Mooshey and Buck were repaid the funds they had advanced. Accordingly, on December 16, the following instruments (all dated December 14) were recorded: a reassignment to Oxwood of Buch’s interest; a reassignment to Oxwood of Mooshey’s interest; and, finally, an assignment by Oxwood of its interest in the trust deed to LaSatier. On the following day (December 15) LaSatier transferred his interest to the defendants; this likewise was recorded on December 16. It was the *403 defendants’ position that none of the foregoing transactions (with the exception, of course, of the transfer to LaSatier) were known either to them or to LaSatier.

According to plaintiffs, on the other hand, the note in suit was “manufactured” by Foster for the convenience of Ox-wood and was, therefore, a mere sham. In this connection, there was testimony that the officers of both companies were closely associated. Foster’s president was a Mr. Falconer; the president of Oxwood was a Mr. Firestone, Falconer’s son-in-law. Each owned all the stock of the company he headed. Both companies had the same attorney and there was a working arrangement between them. Firestone testified that although Foster owed his company $165,000 at the time in question, no money passed from Oxwood to Foster for the $60,000 note; instead he apparently concentrated on selling the note to anybody who was interested. To this end it was turned over to a broker named Whitney; Mr. Walen, the president of Occidental Escrow, was asked by Firestone to “spread the word around” that the note was for sale. Walen himself testified that while paragraph (e) of the escrow provided that plaintiffs’ second trust deed would be subordinate “to a new loan of $60,000 payable as per its terms,” no money in that amount passed through his escrow. Although, as stated earlier, plaintiffs were told that Foster needed the money (assertedly realizable from the note) for development costs incident to the Santa Maria project, and although plaintiffs were given a trust deed on such property, a visit by plaintiffs to this property approximately one year after the close of escrow disclosed no improvements thereon.

It hardly becomes necessary for us now to state that Foster defaulted on the subject note and trust deed (as it also did in payments due to Lincoln Savings and to plaintiffs on their trust deed). Defendants thereupon instituted foreclosure proceedings, and plaintiffs in turn commenced this action. It proceeded to trial against only the Idelsons and the trustee of the deed of trust securing the $60,000 note. 2 The trial court agreed with plaintiffs that there was no consideration for the note; that it was issued as part of a plan whereby the payee would have the note for sale and would retain any sums it could realize therefrom; that this plan was effected *404 because of the close association of the officers of Oxwood and Foster, the result being that $42,000 was raised (and retained in various amounts between said parties) from its sale to defendants, and plaintiffs’ property left responsible for payment of the note. In this connection, the court made a finding that LaSatier, as defendants’ agent and during the course of his negotiations for the purchase of the note, knew that Ox-wood paid nothing to Foster for either the note or trust deed, and that he also knew of the close association of the companies’ officers. The court further found; in addition to the absence of any consideration, that the note, under all the circumstances, was usurious, and that no permit had been sought or obtained for the issuance of said instrument by Oxwood and Foster (both corporations) from the California Commissioner of Corporations.

To sustain the judgment appealed from upon the ground of failure of consideration, it must appear that the Idelsons were not holders in due course. Section 3139 of the Civil Code states: “In the hands of any holder other than a holder in due course, a negotiable instrument is subject to the same defenses as if it were non-negotiable.

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Bluebook (online)
228 Cal. App. 2d 399, 39 Cal. Rptr. 466, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/szczotka-v-idelson-calctapp-1964.