Whittier v. Visscher

209 P. 23, 189 Cal. 450, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 350
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 1922
DocketL. A. No. 7117.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 209 P. 23 (Whittier v. Visscher) 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
Whittier v. Visscher, 209 P. 23, 189 Cal. 450, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 350 (Cal. 1922).

Opinion

*451 SLOANE, J.

This action was originally begun by one Eva B. Clark, as plaintiff, to recover on a promissory note. The note, conceded to be non-negotiable, was for the sum of $4,750, and was executed by appellants and defendants Mrs. W. E. Yisscher and Hugo Kraght Yisscher to defendant Mrs. E. M. Dixon.

Before suit was instituted the note had been indorsed by the payee, Mrs. Dixon, to Henry P. Whittier, the present plaintiff" and respondent, and by him indorsed without'recourse to the original plaintiff, Eva B. Clark, who thereafter brought this action to recover from the Yisschers, the makers of the note, and from Mrs. Dixon, the first indorser. Mrs. Dixon having failed to appear and answer, her default was regularly entered.

The Yisschers answered and by way of defense set up fraud, misrepresentation and failure of consideration in the procurement of the note sued on. The undisputed facts show that the note was given as part of the consideration for 924 shares of the capital stock of a corporation existing under the name of Brinks Express Company. The defendant Mrs. E. M. Dixon owned 921 of the 924 shares, and the remaining 3 belonged to other directors of the corporation. The total corporate stock consisted of 1392 shares.

The corporation was at the time indebted to defendant Mrs. W. E. Yisscher in the sum of $5,000, evidenced by a promissory note for that amount executed by the corporation, upon which note the respondent Whittier was liable as an indorser. The entire consideration for the 924 shares of stock received by the Yisschers was the note sued on and the release of respondent Whittier from liability as indorser on the $5,000 note of the corporation.

The liability upon the $5,000 note itself does not seem to have been released as to the corporation or any of its stockholders other than the respondent.

The fraud alleged in the transaction need not be set out in detail. It is sufficient to say that it consisted of alleged representations by the owners of the stock with regard to the value, character and extent of the business of the corporation, which, if shown to be false and fraudulent, and if available to the appellant defendants under their answer, would constitute a sufficient defense to recovery in this action.

*452 The appellant defendants also set up by supplemental answer as a cross-demand their claim against Mrs. E. M, Dixon, the original payee of the note in suit, for her stockholder’s liability on the indebtedness of the corporation evidenced by the $5,000 note held by Mrs. Yisscher.

These defenses were denied and excluded from the evidence by the trial court, and the judgment appealed from, for the full amount of the note sued on, was given for the respondent, who, pending the trial, had procured a reassignment of the note to himself, and was substituted as plaintiff in place of his former assignee, Eva B. Clark, the original plaintiff.

It is upon the rulings of the trial court defeating the special defense and the counterclaim of appellants that the controversy arises on this appeal.

The respondent plaintiff interposed as a plea in bar to the defense of fraud in procurement of the note a judgment in another action in which the same issue of fraud had been tried and determined adversely to the same averments contained in their answer in this action.

It was stipulated between the parties on the trial that the plaintiffs in the former action were the same persons as the defendants prosecuting this appeal, and that the defendants in the former action were the respondent Whittier and the defendant Mrs. E. M. Dixon in this case. The cause of action was for rescission of the contract under which the corporate stock was obtained, and to cancel the note in suit, and re-establish the liability of the respondent as indorser of the corporation note. The allegations of fraud, misrepresentation and failure of consideration were identical with the averments of the answer before us. Judgment was for the defendants, negativing the allegations of fraud and upholding the validity of the note. On appeal the judgment was affirmed by the district court of appeal, and a rehearing in this court was denied. (Visscher v. Dixon, 46 Cal. App. 210 [188 Pac. 1029].)

[1] It is the contention of appellants, however, that the bar of the judgment is defeated by reason of the fact which is disclosed by the record here, that the action in which the judgment was obtained was begun some ten days after the note sought to be avoided had been assigned to Eva B. *453 Clark, and Eva B. Clark was never made a party to the action.

The court at no time acquired jurisdiction of the real party in interest in the note and was clearly without power to give a judgment which would affect the status of the note owned by a stranger to the record who took the assignment before the commencement of the suit.

Had Eva B. Clark remained the plaintiff in the present suit and the owner of the note, this earlier judgment could not be pleaded as an estoppel to a retrial of the issue of fraud as against her.

Does the fact that respondent Whittier took a reassignment of the note and was substituted as plaintiff in this case pending trial give any greater vitality to the earlier judgment than it would have had for or against his assignor?

Assuming that this might not be the ease if the only interest of the respondent in the former action had been in connection with the ownership of the note, it must be borne in mind that such action involved the rescission of the entire contract for the purchase and sale of the corporation stock, for which the note was only part of the consideration. The release of respondent from his liability as indorser of the $5,000 note of the corporation held by Mrs. Yisscher was also one of the considerations for the shares of stock, and the action for rescission had for one of its purposes the restoration of respondent’s liability as such indorser. He was, therefore, a proper and necessary party to the action for rescission for that reason, quite independently of any interest in the note sought to be canceled, and the judgment was conclusive as to this defense of fraud upon respondent’s liability as indorser of the corporation note.

Conceding, then, that respondent could not be brought into privity with the former judgment by a reassignment from Eva B. Clark, who was not a party to the first suit, we are of the opinion that when his right to enforce payment on the reassigned note was questioned on the ground of this alleged fraud in its procurement, he could plead a former adjudication of that issue by virtue of his own relation to the suit in which the adjudication was made. The relief sought against respondent to re-establish his liability *454 as indorser of the corporation note depended upon precisely the same state of facts as to the alleged fraud as would the cancellation of the note, the fraud in the transfer of the stock, which transfer was the consideration for both the note in suit and the release of respondent’s liability on the other note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 P. 23, 189 Cal. 450, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittier-v-visscher-cal-1922.