Thompson v. Koeller

191 P. 927, 183 Cal. 476, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 430
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 5371.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 191 P. 927 (Thompson v. Koeller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Koeller, 191 P. 927, 183 Cal. 476, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 430 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

This is an appeal by the two principal defendants from a judgment against them foreclosing a mortgage upon real property given to secure'a note for two thousand dollars. The facts are:

The note and mortgage were executed by the defendant, Frederick Koeller, and his wife, Louise Koeller, the latter of whom subsequently died and the administrator of whose es-state, Walter H. Richards, is the other of the appealing defendants. The note and mortgage by their terms denote an absolute obligation to pay on the part of the Koellers, but were in fact given as collateral security for the payment of certain notes of third persons given the plaintiff for the purchase price of certain tractors which such persons were buying from him and which he w;as willing to sell to them on credit secured by the Koeller note. These notes were not paid, and the purchasers of the tractors came into default upon them in an amount in excess of the Koeller note, with the result that the obligation of the latter, which in its inception was conditioned upon such default, became unconditional.

In this situation, Mrs. Koeller having died, the plaintiff presented to the defendant Richards as administrator of her estate a claim for the amount due on the note, specifying that the claim was upon the note, a copy of which was attached, and that the note was secured by mortgage, a copy of which was likewise attached. The claim, however, did not specify that the note had been given as security, and in par *478 ticular did not set out copies of the notes for which it was security. The administrator neither allowed nor rejected the claim, and the statutory time for him to act having expired, the plaintiff brought the present action.

The plaintiff’s complaint was in the usual form of a complaint in a foreclosure suit, setting out the note and mortgage in full, and alleging presentation of the claim against Mrs. Koeller’s estate. The complaint, however, like the claim, did not set out that the note had originally been given as security. The only substantial defense pleaded in the defendants’ answers was that the note had been so given, coupled with the averment that the notes of the third persons evidencing the primary obligation to the plaintiff had been discharged. At the trial the plaintiff introduced the note and mortgage in evidence, the note being overdue by its terms, testified that nothing had been paid upon it, and rested. The defendants then proved that the note had been given as collateral security, and rested. The plaintiff then sought to introduce evidence of the default on the notes which the note in suit had been given to secure. To this the defendants objected. The trial court, however, permitted the evidence, and at the conclusion of the trial found that the Koeller note had been given as security but that default had been made upon the notes it was given to secure in an amount larger than the amount of the Koeller note, and gave judgment for the plaintiff.

The principal points made by the defendants on appeal are two. It is claimed, first, that the court should not have permitted the plaintiff, after the defendants had shown that the note in suit had been given as security, to show the default in the obligations secured. The contention of the defendants is not a mere procedural one, as to which there could be no reasonable question, that the court might not in its discretion permit the plaintiff to reopen his case after he had once rested. Their contention goes much deeper and is essentially that the evidence introduced made out a cause of action at variance with that alleged in the complaint. The particular point is that the complaint in alleging merely the execution and maturity of the Koeller note and that it was unpaid, without alleging that it was given as security, sets out an unconditional obligation, while the proof showed a *479 conditional obligation, that is, one conditional in its inception on a default upon the notes it was given to secure.

The second contention of the defendants is based upon much the same proposition. It is that the claim presented against the estate of Mrs. Koeller was insufficient in that it, like the complaint, failed to set out that the note had been given as security, and in particular failed to set out copies of the notes whose payment it secured.

In support of both contentions, the defendants rely upon Stockton Savings Bank v. McCown, 170 Cal. 600, [150 Pac. 985], In support of the first, they rely particularly upon the following language from the opinion in that case: “It needs no citation of authorities to sustain the rule that in a suit against a surety the principal obligation and its nonpayment must be clearly set forth because the surety’s liability is only conditional. But there is ample authority well illustrated by the following citations: [citing a number of authorities.]”

Now, there can be no question as to the correctness of the rule so laid down in a ease where the instrument upon which the suit is brought is by its own terms conditional. If such an instrument is set forth in the complaint, or it otherwise appears from the allegations of the complaint that the obligation sued on was conditional, as, for example, if it appear that the note was given as security, the complaint plainly docs not state a cause of action unless it also alleges the happening of the condition necessary on the face of the complaint to entitle the plaintiff to recover. None of the cases cited in Stockton Sav. Bank v. McCown as authority for the rule goes any further than this.

[1] But such a rule has no application whatever to a ease such as the present, where the instrument sued on is unconditional by its terms and the condition to which it is subject is created by extrinsic facts entirely. In such a case, although the instrument may be set out in full in the complaint, there is nothing to show that the obligation is not absolute and the complaint states a good cause of action. [2] As a defense the defendant may allege and show, as the defendants did here, that the_ obligation was in fact, conditional. When the defendant does this, however, he does not make out a variance between the instrument sued on and the one shown by the proof. The instrument shown by the *480 proof is identical with the one pleaded. The facts which the defendant pleads and proves are by way of confession and avoidance of the case alleged by the complaint, not by way of denial of it. That this is so is demonstrated by the fact that the defendant cannot truthfully deny the facts alleged in the complaint, and, in particular, the fact of the. execution of the exact instrument sued upon. The matter alleged in the answer, to wit, that the obligation of the instrument sued on was conditional, being by way of confession and avoidance, the plaintiff might at common law in turn avoid the effect of the matter so alleged by the defendant by replication or reply, alleging that the condition set forth in the defendant’s plea or answer has in fact occurred, so that the existence of the condition in the first instance is no longer a defense. [3]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 P. 927, 183 Cal. 476, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-koeller-cal-1920.