234 P. 334 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
The plaintiff sued to recover the amounts due on two promissory notes. Judgment went for the plaintiff and the defendants have appealed.
The controversy arose out of a real estate transaction. An alfalfa farm near Fresno was owned by Mr. Mason. He entered into a contract by which he agreed to sell to J.J. Williams and R.L. Inman. Inman was to purchase an undivided two-thirds and Williams was to purchase an *47 undivided one-third. The terms of that instrument were such that the purchasers were to go into possession and one-half of the alfalfa hay was to be delivered to Mr. Mason. After the purchasers had been in possession for a period of time they allowed C.R. Shipley to farm the alfalfa, harvest the hay and deliver to Mr. Mason the portion to which he was entitled under the contract. After that arrangement had been followed for a while, on the fifth day of June, 1922, Shipley made oral contracts. By the terms of one agreement he agreed to purchase the two-thirds interest of Inman, and by the terms of another agreement he agreed to purchase the one-third interest of Williams. As to Williams the purchase price was $933. Of that sum Shipley paid in cash $133 and executed two promissory notes. Each note was dated June 5, 1922. One note was payable seventeen months after date and the other one was payable twenty-nine months after date. Each note bore interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, and was payable annually. Each note contained a provision that if the interest was not paid as agreed the note should immediately become due at the option of the holder. The defendant Shipley signed the notes on the day they were dated. About three months later Mrs. Shipley, the other defendant, signed the notes. As recited above Shipley was in possession of the farm caring for the crops at the time the agreements last above mentioned were executed. Thereafter he continued in possession and as the hay was harvested made deliveries to Mason, or for Mason's account, and Williams does not appear to have been on the place excepting to make an occasional call. The terms of the agreement between Shipley and Inman were such that Shipley was to build a house at Parlier for Inman, and that the house and lot were to be accepted by Inman in payment of his equity. Later, Shipley not having performed his part of the contract with Inman, Inman retook possession of the alfalfa farm.
On or about October 1, 1923, Frank English and his wife, D.E. English, entered into a contract with Williams whereby the Englishes agreed to sell and Williams agreed to purchase a house and lot in Fresno for the sum of $4,500. As a part of the purchase price Williams transferred to the *48 Englishes the two notes above mentioned and guaranteed "the payment of said notes and interest in the sum of $870, and if the same are not paid promptly when due then the same shall not be a credit on said purchase price, and said real property shall revert back to the said first parties hereto and the interest of the second party in this contract and in said premises shall be at an end." There is no evidence that Mrs. English, the respondent, knew any infirmity regarding the notes. The evidence is slightly conflicting as to whether her husband knew any infirmity regarding the notes before he had executed the contract with Williams. However, shortly after that contract had been executed Frank English called on Shipley and at that time Shipley stated to him the facts hereinabove recited. Later the interest was not paid upon request being duly made and this action was commenced. The trial court made findings on all of the issues against the defendants and in favor of the plaintiff. Among other findings the trial court found that the notes were "sold, assigned and transferred by the said J.J. Williams to the said plaintiff D.E. English, prior to the maturity of said notes, or either of them, and that at the time of the transfer of said notes by the said J.J. Williams to the said plaintiff, plaintiff had no knowledge or information that the said defendants disclaimed liability on said notes, or either of them, or that the said notes were not what they purported to be on their face."
Before proceeding further it will be best to dispose of one fact that entered into the proof but which strikes us as being immaterial. Before Inman and Williams entered into their contracts with Shipley, Williams entered into a contract with Inman by the terms of which he agreed to sell his equity to Inman. That contract was recorded; but it was never carried out by the parties but, on the other hand, it was by the parties mutually abandoned. For all of the purposes of this case we think that the agreement between Inman and Williams stands as though it were never executed.
[1] The appellants call attention to the fact that the agreement between Williams and Shipley was oral, that it involved the sale of an interest in real property, and that *49
the agreement was therefore invalid. (Civ. Code, sec.
[2] The appellants rely upon a want of consideration as a defense. As to C.R. Shipley, we cannot understand his contention in this behalf. The record does not contain any conflict regarding the agreement being to the effect that Williams agreed to sell his equity to Shipley for the sum of $933, and that Shipley agreed to pay the same. Moreover, it is equally clear that Williams thereupon immediately left the property and has not in any way attempted to take the possession from Shipley. As to the defendant C.R. Shipley, the defense is entirely without merit.
[3] As to the defendant Ethel Shipley, it appears from the evidence that she signed some three months after the notes had been delivered to her father, J.J. Williams. There is no evidence to the effect that the respondent, or her agent, Frank English, knew at the time the notes were purchased from Williams that Shipley signed and delivered the notes on one date and his wife delivered the notes on another date. The evidence shows that the respondent is a holder in due course. As against her the appellant Ethel Shipley may not set up the defense of absence of consideration. (Civ. Code, sec.
[4] The fact that the interest was due and payable in June, 1923, and that it had not been paid, was a fact *50 which the appellants were entitled to present to the consideration of the trial court on the issue as to whether the plaintiff is a holder in due course. However that fact is not controlling. It is not of such weight as to disturb the finding of the trial court.
[5] It does not appear from the evidence that when the respondent accepted the notes she knew that they had been executed by the maker as one step in an executory agreement to buy and sell land. However, if she did know it nevertheless it is further certain that she did not know of any infirmity in that transaction either in the nature of fraud or breach of contract. It follows that the position of the respondent as a holder in due course is not weakened. (McNight v. Parsons,
The appellants cite and rely on Griswold v. Morrison,
The judgment is affirmed.
Langdon, P.J., and Nourse, J., concurred.