239 P. 313 | Cal. | 1925
This appeal is by the plaintiff upon the judgment-roll and is from that portion of the judgment which fails to adjudge and decree that the defendant and respondent herein, J.M. Jones, is personally liable to the plaintiff upon the obligation sued upon by him herein, and that in that respect the said judgment is not supported by but is, as a matter of law, inconsistent with the findings of fact. The facts of the case, as they appear from the findings, are briefly these: On January 31, 1921, the defendants F.E. Robinson and B.D. Huff, who were copartners, executed and delivered their individual promissory note to the plaintiff herein for the sum of four hundred dollars, payable on or before December 1, 1921, with interest and counsel fees, and at the time of the execution and delivery of said promissory note, and for the purpose of securing the payment thereof, also executed and delivered to the plaintiff their chattel mortgage upon certain personal property. Thereafter and on June 27, 1921, the defendant Huff, for a valuable consideration, assigned and transferred all of his right, title, and interest in the copartnership and also all of his right, title, and interest in and to the property covered by said mortgage to the defendant and respondent herein, J.M. Jones, who at the time of said assignment and transfer and as a part of the consideration therefor assumed in writing and promised and agreed to pay the obligation of said B.D. Huff created by the latter's aforesaid execution and delivery of said promissory note to the plaintiff herein. Thereafter, the said promissory note *674
not having been paid, the plaintiff commenced this action for a recovery thereon, for the foreclosure of the mortgage given as security therefor, and for a deficiency judgment against the defendants Robinson, Huff, and Jones, in the event that the sale of the security should be insufficient to satisfy the judgment. The defendant Huff defaulted. The defendant Jones appeared and set up as a defense to said action that at the time of the assignment and transfer to him by said Huff of all of his interest in said copartnership and in the property covered by plaintiff's mortgage, and at the time of the assumption by said Jones of the obligations of said Huff and of his promise to pay the same, he, the said Jones, was secretly acting as the undisclosed agent for one W.C. Robinson, and that engaging in said transaction as a principal he did so for the use and benefit of said Robinson and solely as his agent, and that the secret relationship between himself and the said Robinson was unknown to anyone other than themselves. The trial court, in addition to its other findings, found this to be the fact, and thereupon in its conclusions of law, which were generally in favor of the plaintiff as between himself and the other defendants, found that as to the defendant Jones he was not personally liable to the plaintiff. In its judgment, which otherwise followed the findings in plaintiff's favor, the court directed that whatever deficiency judgment should exist after the sale of the mortgaged property and the application of the proceeds thereof pro tanto to the payment of the plaintiff's judgment, should be docketed against the defendants Robinson and Huff, but that as to the defendant Jones the court failed to direct the entry or docketing of any deficiency judgment against him. It is from the latter portion of said judgment that the plaintiff has prosecuted this appeal. We are of the opinion that the trial court was in error in its conclusion of law based upon the foregoing findings of fact that the defendant Jones was not personally liable to the plaintiff for the amount of the obligation of Huff which he assumed and agreed to pay at the time of the transfer to him by said Huff of the latter's interest in the copartnership and in the property which secured said obligation; and was also in error in its judgment predicated upon such conclusion of law. In so far as the defendant Huff was concerned the averment of the respondent Jones *675
to the effect that in assuming the obligation of Huff to the plaintiff herein he was acting as the agent of an undisclosed principal would admittedly have constituted no defense in an action brought by Huff to enforce said obligation. Nor do we think it would be sufficient to constitute a defense to the action brought by this plaintiff to enforce the obligation against Jones, which, in the capacity of a principal on the face thereof, he entered into as between himself and Huff, but which inured to the benefit of the plaintiff by virtue of the fact that he was the creditor of Huff at the time. In the case ofWilliams v. Naftzger,
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the lower court to so modify its conclusions of law and its judgment based thereon as to declare and decree the personal liability of the respondent Jones to the plaintiff upon his assumed obligation, and to provide for a deficiency judgment against said respondent in the event that the mortgaged property shall upon sale thereof be found insufficient to satisfy said obligation.
Shenk, J., Lennon, J., Lawlor, J., Houser, J., pro tem., Myers, C.J., and Seawell, J., concurred. *677