Wright v. Beeson

112 P. 1091, 159 Cal. 133, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 302
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1911
DocketS.F. No. 3696.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 P. 1091 (Wright v. Beeson) 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
Wright v. Beeson, 112 P. 1091, 159 Cal. 133, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 302 (Cal. 1911).

Opinions

SHAW, J.

The case involves two actions, relating to the same transaction, appealed from the superior court of Fresno County. Appeals are taken in each case from the judgment and from an order denying Wright’s motion for a new trial. All the appeals are presented upon one transcript.

On September 13, 1900, in the superior court of Tulare County, Beeson began case numbered 9184, against Wright, alleging that, in June, 1900, he sold and delivered to Wright sixty shares of the capital stock of the Enterprise Lumber Company, for the agreed price of $5,285.12, which Wright then promised to pay; that Wright had paid thereon twenty-nine hundred dollars, that the balance, $2,385.12, remains unpaid, for which sum he asks judgment. On September 21, *135 1900, Wright began the action numbered 9149, against Beeson and Brown. This is a suit upon a promissory note for nineteen hundred dollars executed by Beeson to Wright on May 11, 1900, payable one day after date with interest until paid, and secured by the pledge of twenty shares of stock of said company, the said twenty shares being a part of the sixty shares mentioned in the suit of Beeson v. Wright (No. 9184). It is alleged that Brown claims some interest in the stock. Judgment was asked for the amount of the note and for the foreclosure of the lien of the pledge of the stock. Brown answered disclaiming any interest.

The two cases were tried together upon the stipulation that the same evidence should be taken and considered, so far as applicable, in each case. Judgment was given in favor of Beeson in the case of Beeson v. Wright (No. 9184) for the recovery of $2,385.12 alleged to be due as the balance of the price of the stock. In the case of Wright v. Beeson (No. 9149), upon the promissory note, judgment was given in favor of the defendants that the plaintiff take nothing thereby. The only contention which it is necessary to notice is the claim that the judgment in each case is contrary to the evidence.

There is no substantial conflict in the evidence, except upon one point. On March 24, 1900, Beeson was the owner of the sixty shares of said stock, Brown having at that time some subordinate interest therein. Forty of these shares were the subject of litigation in an action then pending in the superior court, entitled Feusier v. Wright, and were deposited in court, awaiting the final decision in the case. On the day mentioned, Beeson and Brown executed a written contract with Wright, whereby it is declared that they sold and delivered to Wright the sixty shares of stock in controversy, forty of said shares to be taken at the price of three thousand dollars, and the remaining twenty shares at the price of nineteen hundred dollars. The agreement further provided that no part of the price fixed for said stock was to be paid until the entire sixty shares should be delivered and transferred, or were ready to be transferred, on the hooks of the corporation, to Wright, and that, if it should become impossible to transfer the whole sixty shares to Wright, he would reassign and convey to the sellers all his interest therein.

On May 11, 1900, Wright, at the request of Beeson, ad *136 vanced to Beeson the sum of nineteen hundred dollars, as a loan, for which Beeson executed the note sued on in the case of Wright v. Beeson and pledged to Wright, as security therefor, the twenty shares of stock which were not involved in the suit with Feusier. According to the testimony of Beeson, it was then understood that if the litigation with Feusier resulted in favor of Beeson and Wright, the stock should be retained by Wright and the note canceled. About that time the case of Feusier v. Wright was tried, and about June 12th a decision was announced by the court in favor of Wright, but no findings or judgments were filed or entered in the case until June 18th. On June 12th, after the decision was announced, Wright, Beeson, and Brown met on the street in Fresno. At that time Wright was secretary of the company, the twenty shares were in his possession as pledgee, and the forty shares were on deposit in court in the case of Feusier v. Wright and in control of the court. What took place at that meeting is the controlling factor in the case. The evidence upon that subject is conflicting. As the finding is in favor of Beeson and Brown, we must, in the consideration of the appeals, accept their version as true. They testified that Brown, at Beeson’s request, presented to Wright a statement purporting to be a statement of account between Beeson and Wright. The statement charged to Wright three thousand dollars for the forty shares of stock and two notes due from one MeFadzen, one of $621.25 to Brown, the other of $78.87 to Beeson, and gave Wright credit for a balance of three hundred and fifteen dollars due from one Young, leaving a balance due from Wright to Beeson of $3,385.12. Thereupon, according to their statement, Beeson stated that he wanted to settle up in full and close the transaction for the sixty shares of stock and wanted Wright to return the nineteen-hundred-dollar note. Wright said he could not pay all the money that day but that he could pay one thousand dollars, that he did not know when he could pay the remainder but that he would pay it within a short time. Beeson said he would need the money on July 6th to pay on some land he had bought, to which Wright replied that he would see that Beeson was not cramped and would make the payment in time to enable Beeson to meet the obligation for the property and that he would return the note, which he had left at his home, as soon as he could find it. *137 Wright then paid the one thousand dollars, and it was entered by him as a credit on the said statement of account. Beeson and Brown also testified that Wright agreed to take the stock in the condition it was in at that time, at the price of $5,285.12, and also agreed to pay the two notes of McFadzen, amounting to $700.12, and that he would allow the nineteen hundred dollars, advanced on the note and secured by the pledge of the twenty shares, to stand as a payment for the twenty shares and would cancel the note of Beeson for that sum; that thereupon they all called it a deal and said the trade was finished, Wright also agreeing that if an appeal was taken in the case of Feusier v. Wright he would take care of it at his own expense.

This was substantially all the testimony given in support of the suit of Beeson v. Wright for the balance of the alleged price of the sixty shares of stock. The execution of the note for nineteen hundred dollars is admitted and the only defense to it consists of the claim that by the transaction of June 12, 1900, Wright agreed to take the pledged stock in the condition in which it then was in satisfaction of the debt due upon the note. The transaction of June 12th was entirely oral. No writing modifying, rescinding, or amending the contract of March 24, 1900, was ever executed by the parties.

It is obvious that this transaction could not have operated to alter or change the written contract with regard to the forty shares of stock deposited in court. A written contract cannot be altered, except by a contract in writing, or by an executed oral agreement. (Civ. Code, see.

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Bluebook (online)
112 P. 1091, 159 Cal. 133, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-beeson-cal-1911.