Vance v. Gilbert

174 P. 42, 178 Cal. 574, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 524
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1918
DocketL. A. No. 4556. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 174 P. 42 (Vance v. Gilbert) 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
Vance v. Gilbert, 174 P. 42, 178 Cal. 574, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 524 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The above-named appellants appeal from the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, from an order denying *576 their motion for a new trial, and from an order denying their motion to retax costs.

The complaint states a cause of action upon a promissory note dated October 26, 1910, for seven hundred dollars executed by the above-named appellants, payable to said Halladay Motor Car Company, four months after date, and to foreclose an alleged equitable mortgage upon a tract of land, for the security of said note. It is alleged that the note was indorsed by the Halladay Motor Car Company to the plaintiffs and that it is unpaid. With respect to the lien on the real estate, it is alleged that prior to the execution of the note the defendants, C. M. Gilbert and Rosina Holmes, agreed to exchange an automobile for the said real property, which at that time belonged to said Helen B. Mortimer; that at the request of said Gilbert and Holmes, said Helen B. Mortimer executed a deed purporting to convey said real property to the “Halladay Motor Car Company”; that the said conveyance was executed to enable the said Halladay Company to hold the property as security for the note sued on; and that it was agreed between the parties that the said conveyance should operate as a mortgage upon said property to secure the payment of the said note. It was further alleged that said company was a partnership, that the deed was inoperative because it did not contain the names of the persons composing the same, and that said Helen B. Mortimer holds the title thereto for the benefit of the said appellants and of the holder of the said note, and as security for the payment thereof. Helen B. Mortimer was made a party defendant in the action, as also was the Halladay Motor Car Company and the members thereof, and they suffered default. The answer is extremely voluminous and contains a large amount of irrelevant and rather incoherent matter, a large part of which was stricken out on motion of the plaintiffs and which need not be further referred to. It alleges that the note was given without consideration and that it was procured by fraud and misrepresentation by said Halladay Motor Car Company. The court made findings that all the allegations of the complaint were true, that the note was given for a valuable consideration and was not obtained by fraud as alleged. Judgment followed in accordance with the findings.

It was no concern of these appellants whether the summons was properly served on the Halladay Motor Car Com *577 pany or not. It was a partnership, its members were parties defendant to the action, and a service on them would be good against the company. The motion to quash the service on the company was, therefore, properly overruled.

The action was equitable in character. Therefore, the court did not err in denying the demand for a trial by jury. (Downing v. Le Du, 82 Cal. 471, [23 Pac. 202].)

A large portion of the record and of the appellants’ brief is occupied with objections growing out of a transaction in writing which appellants claim amounted to an assignment of the note by the plaintiffs to William E. Lady, the attorney for the plaintiffs. The action was begun in 1912 and the alleged assignment to Lady was not made until April 1, 1914. Where a transfer of a cause of action is made while an action thereon is pending, it may be continued in the name of the original party. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 385.) The appellants do not show that they would be in anywise benefited if Lady were substituted as plaintiff. The entire controversy upon that subject was and is fruitless and immaterial. It is proper, to say, however, that the instrument in question does not assign the note itself to Lady, but merely assigns to him all the plaintiffs’ right, title, and interest to any money that may be collected thereon, and it authorized him to prosecute an action therefor in the name of the plaintiffs and to receive any and all moneys ‘obtained by means of such action.

The parties and the judge of the court below appear to have understood so well the transaction, in which the note was given and the lien created, that little evidence in proof of it was offered. We gather its terms from the briefs and the evidence which appears on the subject. The appellants purchased from the Halladay Motor Car Company a “Halladay” automobile and paid a small part of the price in cash. At that time they owned a Peerless automobile, which they delivered to the Halladay Company to be sold for their account, the proceeds to be applied on the purchase price of the “Halladay” machine. The Halladay Company sold the Peerless machine to Helen B. Mortimer in exchange for a lot of land which she owned. It was unwilling to take the lot as payment for the “Halladay” machine and it asked the appellants to execute a note for the price, with the understanding that the lot obtained from Mortimer would be held by it as security for the note. This was agreed to, and thereupon Mortimer *578 executed a deed purporting to convey the land to the “Halladay Motor Car Company,” the appellants executed the note sued on and the company and the appellants executed an agreement to the effect that if the lot should be sold before the note matured, the proceeds should be applied on the note, “but if not sold before that time, then it shall be deeded to the payors upon the payment by them of said note.” Afterward the Halladay Company sold all its business and assets, including this note and its interest in the lot, to the plaintiff, Vance-Canavan Motor Company. The theory of the plaintiffs’ action is, as stated in the complaint, that the deed of Mortimer was ineffectual because of the fictitious name of the grantee, and that in equity she holds the title in trust for all of the parties for the purposes for which the deal was made. This much it is necessary to say to explain what follows.

The court did not err in admitting in evidence the deed executed by Mortimer to the Halladay Company over the objection that it was void because the grantee was a fictitious person. It was duly executed and acknowledged, and it was pertinent as evidence to prove the allegations of the complaint and to show that Helen B. Mortimer held the title in trust, if the theory of the complaint that she did was correct. The question whether or not the deed was void for the reason stated is of no importance in the case. Both the Halladay Motor Car Company and Helen B. Mortimer were made defendants to the action, the title was vested in either one or the other, and the allegation is that the title was held in trust as security for the payment of this note. They have each suffered default and thereby admitted the facts alleged in the complaint. The foreclosure decree will be effectual regardless of the situation concerning the title, inasmuch as all the parties interested are parties to the action, and a sale under the decree against them all will dispose of the whole title.

It was not necessary for the plaintiffs to prove that the defendant Halladay Motor Car Company had complied with the requirements of sections 2466 and 2468 of the Civil Code. Partnerships having a fictitious name may do business without such compliance. The only penalty of a failure is that such a partnership cannot maintain an action until it has complied with those sections. But there is nothing in the sections to prevent such partnership being made defendant to an action.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P. 42, 178 Cal. 574, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vance-v-gilbert-cal-1918.