78 Cal. 301 | Cal. | 1889
The court below sustained a demurrer to the complaint; and plaintiff refusing to amend, final judgment went for defendants. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment.
One of the defendants (as appears from the complaint) was auditor of Santa Cruz County, and the other defendants were supervisors. One Swinford having been injured by the breaking of a bridge on a county road, presented a demand to the defendants (supervisors), which was by them allowed in the amount of four hundred dollars; 'and the other defendant (auditor) drew a
It is admitted that Swinford never had any legal claim against the county for damages, and that the warrant was unauthorized and invalid. He was not induced by any act of the defendants to give or lose any valuable thing whatever. How can he be said, therefore, to have been "damaged,” or to have sustained any “loss by reason of the non-payment of his claim”? He lost nothing, for he did not have anything to lose. As to plaintiff, it has been held repeatedly that a county warrant has not the qualities of negotiable paper, and that the assignee stands in the shoes of the original holder. Plaintiff was bound to know that the warrant was invalid; and the mere transfer could not make it valuable as to any person against whom it was worthless in the hands of Swinford.
It is not necessary to notice the other points made by the respondents.
Judgment affirmed.
Thornton, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.