Weiss v. First Savings Bank

82 P.2d 45, 28 Cal. App. 2d 140, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 500
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 1938
DocketCiv. 5759
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 P.2d 45 (Weiss v. First Savings Bank) 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
Weiss v. First Savings Bank, 82 P.2d 45, 28 Cal. App. 2d 140, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 500 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiffs brought suit to cancel two promissory notes executed and delivered to the defendant bank March 24, 1930, secured by a deed of trust on lot 6, block 27, of the town of Colusa. The first-note was for the principal sum of $1,000 and the second one was for $800. It is alleged the plaintiffs received no consideration for the $800 note and that the $1,000 note was fraudulently altered by the defendant after its execution and delivery by inserting in a blank space left in the instrument the provision that the note should bear one per cent interest per month after *142 default in the payment of any instalment thereof. Findings were adopted and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant to the effect that plaintiffs take nothing by their action. From that judgment this appeal was perfected.

The plaintiffs are husband and wife. They own lot 6, block 27, in the town of Colusa, where they reside. Mr. Weiss is a merchant in that community. For several years he has been a regular customer of the First Savings Bank of Colusa, where he always maintained an open current account. He frequently borrowed sums of money from that bank on his unsecured notes. For the purpose of paying te Mr. Rupert of Oakland the balance of the purchase price of their Colusa home, the plaintiffs negotiated with the bank a loan of $1,000 to be secured by a trust deed on their home property. At the same time they asked the bank for an additional loan of $800, with which to make repairs upon their home. These loans were obtained from Everett Bowes, who was then an officer of the bank. Both plaintiffs acknowledged the execution of the two notes and of the trust deed, each of which instruments is dated March 24, 1930. The promissory notes are drawn on printed forms which have been used by the bank for several years. Each note was made payable one year from the date thereof “without grace, for value received”. Each note specifically provided for seven per cent interest payable semi-annually, and contained the provision that upon default of any instalment of principal or interest when due the entire note, at the option of the holder thereof, would become due and collectible “and shall bear interest at the rate of - per cent per month from the date of the last paid interest until the whole principal and interest shall be paid”. Both plaintiffs testified that the space for the designation of the rate of accelerated interest in case of default was left blank at the time they executed the notes, and that Mr. Bowes told them he would charge them only seven per cent interest. At the bottom of the note for $800 there was printed the following language: “This note is secured by a,” following which language there is written these words: “Deed of Trust, dated March 24, 1930.” The plaintiffs testified that the last-quoted language was not on the $800 note when they signed it. The trust deed is drawn in the usual form. It creates a lien on lot 6, block 27, of the town of Colusa to secure the payment of the $1,000 *143 note which is specifically mentioned therein. The trust deed provides that it is also executed to secure the payments of all other money loaned or advanced to the plaintiffs by the bank. That clause of the deed reads:

“For the purpose of securing the payment ... of all sums hereafter paid, laid out, expended or advanced by the said Beneficiary under the terms of this deed of trust, together with interest thereon, and for the purpose of securing payment of all sums which may be hereafter loaned, paid out, expended or advanced by the said Beneficiary to said Grantor. ”

The plaintiffs testified that they signed both notes and the trust deed, at the request of Mr. Bowes, in thevr store; that neither note then contained the insertion of the one per cent accelerated interest clause, and that the $800 note did not contain the written statement that it was secured by the trust deed. In conflict yfith the preceding statements Mr. L. A. Mace, the cashier and secretary of the bank, testified that he went to the home of the plaintiffs where he procured the signature of Mrs. Weiss to the $1,000 note and upon the trust deed, and that he then took her acknowledgment to the latter document. He testified to the effect that the $1,000 note did contain the one per cent interest acceleration clause when Mrs. Weiss signed it. His evidence in that regard appears as follows:

“Now with respect to this thousand dollar note, do I understand that you say . . . that note . . . when it was signed by her, was in the form it is now? A. I think so, with the exception of the number [of the note]. ... Q. Do you recall definitely that you had the deed of trust signed by her at the same time? A. I am quite satisfied, sir, in her own home. Q. Well, are you positive about it? A. Yes. Q. You are positive as to both incidents ? A. Yes. Q. But you are not positive as to Louis Weiss? A. No, it may have been in his store and may have been in the Bank. Q. Are you sure it was not at the home ? A. Quite sure, yes sir. Q. Why is it you are so sure about that; is it because the signature of Louis Weiss is written with a different pen than the signature of Gladys Weiss? A. No, it is because I went down to the residence to get her to sign. ’ ’

*144 Mr. Bowes, the bank officer with whom the plaintiffs personally negotiated the loans in question, testified at the trial regarding the $800 note:

“It seems to me that this note was made as an advance under the original [$1,000] note. It was what we call an advance note, an advance of money. ... I think it was just a matter of getting security on $800 that was in the commercial department that one note dated March 24th, 1930, in the amount of $800 was given in exchange for another 800-dollar note that he owed the bank. Well, the $800 was an advance, as I understood him. I considered that it was secured by a deed of trust. I first considered that it was secured by a deed of trust when it was made. I suppose I told Mr. Weiss at that time it was to be secured by a deed of trust. My recollection is I did it. . . . There is a paragraph jn the deed of trust that I presume would cover [the reason] why the 800-dollar note wasn’t mentioned in the deed of trust. The paragraph I have reference to is in regard to advances. Any advances made by the bank after the making of the deed of trust would be considered to be secured by this deed of trust.”

Regarding the plaintiffs’ claim that the one per cent per month accelerated interest which appears in the two notes, after default of any payments, was not inserted when they were executed, Mr. Bowes did say that he had no distinct recollection of that fact. But he did testify in rebuttal of that charge, that:

“I think that the one thousand dollars was an actual payment out of the Bank at that time. I have no recollection of at any time preparing any notes and having them signed by anybody before they were filled out completely. I know of no instance where, if I prepared a note it would not be completely filled in before the party executed it—unless I overlooked something.”

Corroborating the statement of Mr. Mace, who testified that he obtained the signature of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
82 P.2d 45, 28 Cal. App. 2d 140, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiss-v-first-savings-bank-calctapp-1938.