Watson v. Stockton Morris Plan Co.

93 P.2d 855, 34 Cal. App. 2d 393
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 30, 1939
DocketCiv. 6009; Civ. 6030
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 93 P.2d 855 (Watson v. Stockton Morris Plan Co.) 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
Watson v. Stockton Morris Plan Co., 93 P.2d 855, 34 Cal. App. 2d 393 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

THE COURT.

On rehearing, which was granted for the reason that both parties petitioned for it, we have again carefully examined the entire record. We are persuaded that the original opinion of this court correctly determines the issues presented, and we therefore adopt that opinion in toto.

The appellant, Stanley E. Watson, strenuously contends that both the trial court and this court erred in determining that he did not acquire title to the entire savings account involved in this litigation by virtue of his sale of that account as a pledge under the provisions of section 3000 et seq. of the Civil Code. We are unable to support that theory of the appellant for the reason that this is a suit for conversion which the complaint and findings declare occurred on March 26, 1936, and which upon adequate evidence we have held to be true. The sale of the account as a pledge did not occur until three months later. The sale of the account as a pledge was made under the express terms of a written assignment of the account which was conditional and limited the title to that portion thereof which is sufficient to pay the note and accrued interest, the costs of sale and conn *396 sel fees, specifically providing that “the surplus, if any, being payable to the undersignedassignors.

The pledge was therefore limited by the express terms of the written assignment. The original opinion is therefore adopted as follows:

‘ ‘ The plaintiff and the defendant Pacific States Savings and Loan Company have separately appealed from a judgment which was rendered jointly against the defendants, except The Stockton Morris Plan Company, in a suit for conversion of a savings account of $4,994.26.
“The plaintiff also gave separate notice of appeal from a judgment rendered against him after the demurrer of the defendant The Stockton Morris Plan Company had been sustained without leave to amend the pleading. That judgment was to the effect that plaintiff take nothing by his action against that company.
“The court found that the passbook, representing the amount of credit which Mary C. Thomas owned in a savings account with the Pacific States Savings and Loan Company, had been assigned to the plaintiff as a pledge, only, to secure the repayment to him of money advanced to pay a note of Mrs. Thomas in the amount of $2,000, together with interest and costs, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover only the sum of money which he had expended on-that account.
“Mary C. Thomas owns a savings fund in the amount of $4,994.26, deposited with the Pacific States Savings and Loan Company, a corporation, of San Francisco, which account was represented by a passbook numbered 17-A-87. October 25, 1933, for value received, Mrs. Thomas and her son Roy S. Thomas executed and delivered to The Stockton Morris Plan Company, a corporation, their promissory note for $2,000, together with the passbook and a written assignment of the savings account, to be held as a pledge to secure the payment of the note upon the terms therein expressed. The assignment reads in part:
“ ‘I. I/We hereby deposit with The Stockton Morris Plan Company, as collateral security for the payment of that certain promissory note in the sum of Two Thousand Dollars, . . . the following property, to-wit:— Pacific States Savings & Loan Company Pass Book #87, $4,994.26. . . .
“ ‘4. In ease that I/we fail to make payment of said promissory note, or any installments thereon when due, . . . , then I/we hereby invest the payee hereof with the power irrevo *397 cable to sell at any time the whole or part of said pledged property, either at public or private sale, at its discretion, without the giving of notice of any kind in advance of such sale. . . . The proceeds of the sale of said securities, in whole or in part, shall first be applied to the expenses of making said sale, costs of collection and attorney fees; the balance thereof shall be applied pro tanto to the payment of said promissory note and interest accrued thereon, . . . the surplus, if any, being payable to the undersigned. . . .
“ ‘6. On payment of the above note and interest according to its terms, and all charges in connection therewith, this agreement shall be void and the above specified pledged property shall be returned unto me/us. ’
“Two days later the holder of the note and collateral security notified the Pacific States Savings and Loan Company in writing of the assignment to the payee, as pledgee, of the ownership and possession of the pass book and savings account, and requested the transfer thereof on the books of the company in accordance therewith. The savings company acknowledged in writing the receipt of that notice and asserted that it had ‘ caused an entry to be made upon the books of this corporation accordingly’.
“Mrs. Thomas, being unable to meet the payments on the promissory note, requested the plaintiff Stanley E. Watson to do so and he thereupon paid the entire note in ten installments from January to November, 1934. April 10, 1934, Mrs. Thomas and her son executed and delivered to The Stockton Morris Plan Company, the payee and holder of the note, the written authorization to deliver to plaintiff the pass book and canceled note when the indebtedness was fully satisfied, which request reads as follows:
“ ‘By reason of Mr. Stanley E. Watson having made certain payments to you upon our obligation; namely, a $2,-000.00 note dated October 25, 1933, and secured by assignment of Pacific States Savings & Loan Company Pass Book ip87; we desire that upon full payment of the said obligation, that you deliver to Mr. Stanley E. Watson the aforesaid note and Pacific States Savings & Loan Company Pass Book. “Signed this 7th day of Feb. 1934.
“ ‘ (Signed) Mart C. Thomas Rot S. Thomas’
“January 28, 1935, after the note had been paid, The Stockton Morris Plan Company endorsed the note as fully *398 paid, and delivered it to Stanley E. Watson, together with the pass book and the assignment to plaintiff of the entire savings account represented thereby. In February, 1935, the plaintiff notified the Pacific States Savings & Loan Company, in writing, that the Thomas pass book and assignment of account represented thereby had been transferred to him and that he was the owner thereof. The following month Mrs. Thomas and her son filed with the Savings and Loan Company their sworn affidavits averring that she was the owner of the savings account of the principal sum of $4,994.26; that the pass book numbered 17-A-87 was lost and that the account represented thereby had not been pledged, assigned or transferred. The bank possessed facts charging it with knowledge that Mrs. Thomas was not the owner of the account and that the affidavit was false. In spite of that knowledge, the Savings & Loan Company issued to Mrs. Thomas, on March 26, 1936, a duplicate pass book for the full amount of said account, and on application therefor, paid to Mary C.

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Bluebook (online)
93 P.2d 855, 34 Cal. App. 2d 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-stockton-morris-plan-co-calctapp-1939.