Winklemen v. Sides

88 P.2d 147, 31 Cal. App. 2d 387, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 650
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 9, 1939
DocketCiv. 2221
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 88 P.2d 147 (Winklemen v. Sides) 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
Winklemen v. Sides, 88 P.2d 147, 31 Cal. App. 2d 387, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 650 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

This is an action to recover on a promissory note executed by Douglas R. Sides and guaranteed by G. W. E. White and R. W. Binkley. The note is dated August 19, 1932, and is for the principal sum of $3,375.45, payable on demand to the Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association, the assignor of plaintiff.

All defendants pleaded payment of the note. The guarantors interposed additional special defenses pertaining to them alone. The jury returned a general verdict in favor of the three defendants. Plaintiff urges that this demonstrates the verdict was based on an implied finding that the note had been paid. Otherwise, no verdict would have been returned in favor of Sides. There is much logic in this argument and we will adopt it in this opinion. If the judgment may be supported on the theory of payment it will be unnecessary for us to consider any of the questions raised under the special defenses of the guarantors. While defendants do not agree with this position, they cannot complain of our adoption of this theory, if the judgment is affirmed.

In order to properly understand the question before us it is necessary to recite in some detail the financial transactions of defendants with each other and with various banks which occurred during several years prior to the trial of this action in 1937.

*391 For the sake of brevity we will refer to the Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association, as The Bank; to the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley, California, as the Land Bank; and, to the Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank, as the Coast Bank.

Some years prior to 1932, defendants Sides and White, with one Wells, were interested in farming 160 acres of land in Tulare County. Title stood in the name of a corporation in which they were the sole stockholders. The corporation was indebted to a predecessor of the Selma branch of The Bank in a considerable sum. Binkley became interested in the farming venture but did not become a stockholder. The corporation was dissolved and its debts were assumed by the four men. Bach one gave his note for his proportionate share of the indebtedness. The note of each maker was guaranteed by the three other men.

Binkley paid his note. White reduced his note by payments to $1,050. He secured this debt to The Bank by a deed of trust on real property. Wells died leaving a bankrupt estate. The principal of his note was about $2,900. This was settled for $1500, paid as follows: Binkley paid The Bank $500 in cash. Sides gave The Bank his note for $500, guaranteed by White. White gave The Bank his note for $500, guaranteed by Sides. This left, as the sole obligation of the old farming venture remaining in the original form, if not amount, the note of Sides guaranteed by White and Binkley. This note is the basis of the instant action.

The complaint in this action was filed in March, 1933. The separate answers were filed: by Binkley, in October, 1935; by White and Sides, in March, 1936. Much of the time elapsing between the filing of the complaint and the answers was used in negotiations and attempts to settle the controversies between the parties, including the settlement of the obligations arising out of the old farming venture, two of which were liquidated in the manner already mentioned, as well as other obligations of defendant Douglas E. Sides and Thomas M. Sides, his brother, their wives, and of Minnie Hansen. All these negotiations on behalf of the Sides brothers were carried on by Douglas, Thomas residing in Oakland and Cincinnati during this time.

*392 The Sides brothers owned 120 acres of land near Selma, in Fresno County. In 1932 this property was encumbered by a deed of trust securing a principal obligation of $16,000, payable to the Coast Bank, and a second deed of trust securing a note for $6,907.24, payable to The Bank. This second deed of trust contained the recital that it ivas given:

“Second: As security for the payment of such additional amounts as may be hereafter loaned by the Beneficiary, or its successors, to the Trustor, or any of them, or any successor interest of the Trustor, with interest thereon, and for the payment of any other indebtedness or obligation of the Trustor, or any of them, and for all present or future demands of any kind or nature, which the Beneficiary or its successor may have against the Trustor, or any of them, whether created directly or acquired by assignment: whether absolute or contingent ; whether due or not or whether otherwise secured or not, or whether existing at the time of the execution of this instrument, or arising thereafter. ’ ’

The obligation to the Coast Bank called for substantial periodical payments. These the Sides brothers were not able to make. The Coast Bank offered them a substantial discount for an early cash payment of the loan. Douglas Sides approached the officers of The Bank and asked for assistance to enable him to accept this offer. At the suggestion of an officer of The Bank a plan was developed whereby The Bank would advance sufficient money to purchase the Coast Bank obligation at a discount; that a loan, sufficient to retire the obligations of the Sides brothers, would be obtained from the Land Bank. The Bank purchased the note and deed of trust from the Coast Bank at a discount of $2,900. A loan was secured from the Land Bank in the sum of $13,500, and a Commissioner’s loan in the sum of $6,500, with the Selma property as security for these loans. In December, 1934, the $20,000 obtained on these loans, less expenses of $983.50, was paid by the Land Bank to The Bank which executed a reconveyance under the Coast Bank deed of trust and another under its own deed of trust. This latter reconveyance contains the following:

“Know All Men By These Presents:

‘‘ Whereas, the indebtedness to be paid secured by the Deed of Trust made, executed and delivered on January 18, 1932, *393 by Douglas E. Sides and Elsa I. Sides, his wife, and Thomas M. Sides and Ruth C. Sides, his wife and Minnie Hansen, a widow, to Corporation of America, as Trustee for Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association, as Beneficiary, which Deed of Trust was recorded on January 30, 1932, in the office of the County Recorder of County of Fresno, State of California, in Volume 1194 of Official Records, at Page 332 et seq., has been fully paid; (Emphasis ours.) ...”

The deed of trust to The Bank under which this reconveyance was given contains the following:

“The recitals in any full or partial reconveyance shall be conclusive proof against all persons of the truthfulness thereof. ’ ’

Plaintiff, assignee of The Bank, maintains that the only obligations of either of the Sides brothers which were paid with the money received by The Bank from the Land Bank, was the debt originally held by the Coast Bank, and the note of $6,907.24, given by the Sides brothers, their wives, and Minnie Hansen, to The Bank; that the note in suit here of $3,375.45, signed by Douglas R. Sides and guaranteed by White and Binkley, was not secured by the second deed of trust and was neither paid by the money received from the Land Bank nor acknowledged paid by the reconveyance from which we have already quoted.

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Bluebook (online)
88 P.2d 147, 31 Cal. App. 2d 387, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winklemen-v-sides-calctapp-1939.