Thompson v. Bank of California

88 P. 987, 4 Cal. App. 660
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1906
DocketCiv. No. 240.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 88 P. 987 (Thompson v. Bank of California) 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
Thompson v. Bank of California, 88 P. 987, 4 Cal. App. 660 (Cal. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Plaintiffs are heirs at law of William N. Thompson, deceased. Intervener A. N. Drown is administrator with the will annexed of the estate of said Thompson, deceased. Teresa Bell was .joined as a defendant in the ac-George Staacke, formerly executor of the will of said Bell, deceased, but was later substituted as administratrix with the will annexed of said Bell, and the action as to defendant George j Staacke, formerly executor of the will of said Bell, was dismissed. Objection was made by defendant Teresa Bell to plaintiffs prosecuting the action on the ground that Drown had been appointed administrator of the estate of Thompson, deceased, and had filed his complaint in intervention setting up the same cause of action as that of plaintiffs. The cause was tried upon the issues presented by the complaint of intervener Drown and the answer thereto by defend *663 ant Teresa Bell as administratrix. The defendant bank denied the averments of the complaint in intervention except as to the demand alleged to have been made upon it by the intervener.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury and the intervener had judgment against defendant bank, from which defendant Teresa Bell, administratrix, alone appeals and comes here on a bill of exceptions.

The complaint of intervener and the answer of Teresa Bell present the issues in the case. These pleadings are somewhat voluminous, but the facts essential to a clear understanding of the issues may be considerably abbreviated.

The complaint sets forth: That on November 19, 1891, one L. L. Robinson, being indebted to said Thomas Bell in the sum of $28,262.18 and to said Wm. N. Thompson in the further sum of $1,000, jexecuted on said date to Bell, acting for himself and also as the agent and trustee of Thompson, his promissory note for the sum of $29,262.18, the aggregate of the two above sums, said note to bear five per cent interest. Facts are fully set forth showing a fiduciary relation to have existed on the part of Bell toward Thompson prior to November 19, 1891, and subsequently and up to the day of Bell’s death, and that Bell was the financial agent of Thompson in California and managed the latter’s property, and was charged with the collection of said $1,000 by Thompson, and that it was pursuant to said fiduciary relation that Bell took the said Robinson note in his own name, but that although the said note was in his own name, it was held by Bell as owned in common according to their said respective interests therein; that prior to Bell’s death he became indebted to defendant bank, and j to secure his said indebtedness he pledged the said note to defendant bank without the knowledge or consent of Thompson, but with the knowledge of the defendant bank that said note was owned in common with Bell, and that Bell held Thompson’s interest therein as the agent and trustee of Thompson; that Bell died October 16, 1892, and that the executors of his will were duly notified of Thompson’s interest in said note, and after investigation acknowledged that he had such interest therein; that the said executors of the will of Bell resigned or were removed, and *664 defendant Teresa Bell became administratrix of bis estate; that Thompson died October 15, 1897, and intervener was duly appointed administrator of his estate with will annexed; that about November 5, 1900, and before ,said note or the indebtedness evidenced thereby, or any part thereof, had been paid to defendant bank, plaintiffs in the action notified it of the aforesaid facts as to Thompson’s interest in said note, and that prior to the filing of the complaint in intervention, intervener made demand upon defendant bank for the said sum of $1,000 and interest thereon, but said defendant refused payment thereof; that about the eighth day of December, 1900, defendant bank collected the aforesaid promissory note so held by it as security, to wit, the whole of the principal and a portion of the interest, said amount so collected exceeding by more than $1,500 the amount for which said promissory note was held as security, which said surplus now remains in the hands of said bank and belongs to the estate of said Thompson, deceased, to the extent of said $1,000 and interest thereupon; that the said Teresa, as .administratrix, repudiates the claim of intervener thereto, and claims that the whole of said surplus should be paid to her for the benefit of the said estate of Bell, deceased; that intervener is unable to state the amount of interest paid on said note, but that he is entitled to receive a proportionate share thereof; that the estate of Bell is insolvent, as is also the said Teresa, and that, if said surplus were turned over to her, intervener would be unable to recover the said sum of $1,000 or the interest thereon or any part thereof.

Intervener prays for judgment for the sum of $1,000 and interest collected or received thereon by defendant bank; that defendant bank be required to account to intervener for all moneys collected or received by it on said promissory note, and that he recover his proportion or share of said moneys; that the court adjudge the rights of all parties in and to the said promissory note and the indebtedness evidenced thereby. Prayer also for general relief.

The answer to the complaint in intervention denies most .of its averments. As separate defenses it avers: that whatever money Bell owed Thompson at the death of the former was loaned to him by Thompson and the indebtedness was for *665 money had and received. As a further and separate defense it is alleged that said Thompson, as a creditor of the Beil estate, presented for allowance to the executors thereof “a certain contingent claim for the sum of $1,000, contingent upon the payment to the estate of the said Thomas Bell of the said note of L. L. Robinson described in the complaint of intervention for the sum of $29,262.18,” which said contingent claim was allowed by said executors and approved by the court. For a further defense it is alleged that after the death of Bell, to wit, on February 13, 1893, Thompson presented to said executors his claim, as creditor of said estate of Bell, deceased, wherein he stated that there was on October 16, 1892, a balance on account due and owing to him in the sum of $3,561.63; that the said executors paid the said claim in the month of May, 1893, without any order of the court; that there are other claims against said estate which have never been paid; that the estate is unsettled and the assets thereof are insufficient to pay other claimants “as much on their respective claims as the said Thompson has been paid on his claim as aforesaid.”

It is not alleged that the said claim for $3,561.63 included the amount now claimed or any part of it. Further answering, defendant Teresa pleads this latter sum as a counterclaim.

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Bluebook (online)
88 P. 987, 4 Cal. App. 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-bank-of-california-calctapp-1906.