35 P. 639 | Cal. | 1893
This appeal is prosecuted from a final judgment in favor of plaintiff and from an order denying motion for a new trial. There are three counts in the complaint, as follows: (1) Upon a promissory note for $12,500, dated October 19, 1881, made by “California National Bank, per J. W. Collins, Pres.,” upon which a payment of $2,500 was admitted ; (2) a cause of action upon an overdraft for $9,862.95, which was admitted, except that defendant claimed that the $2,500 credited in the first cause of action should be applied to the second; (3) a cause of action for the recovery of $25,000, loaned by plaintiff to defendant May 18, 1891, with a credit thereon of $15,000.
The findings are in favor of plaintiff, and are sufficient to support the judgment. By the second finding it appears that “the first and third counts of plaintiff’s complaint relate to the same indebtedness.” According to these findings, the plaintiff on the eighteenth day of May, 1891, loaned to the defendant $25,000 at defendant’s request; that defendant paid
The contention of appellant is that the finding of the court that plaintiff loaned to the defendant $25,000 on the twenty-eighth day of May, 1891, is not supported by the evidence. It is in proof that a promissory note for $25,000, made by five individuals, payable to “L. J. Gage, Vice-president,” was sent to the plaintiff in Chicago; and the theory of appellant is that plaintiff discounted the note, and there is certainly some evidence in support of the theory. On the other hand, it appears that Gage, the vice-president of the plaintiff bank, located in Chicago, was in San Diego; that the president of the defendant bank negotiated with him for a loan of $25,000 to $40,000, offering to put up, as collateral, notes, bank stock, etc.—anything, in short, that plaintiff wished; and it was finally arranged that with proper security, plaintiff would make the loan to defendant. H. F. Norcross, who was present at the negotiations, was afterward requested to write to Gage, viee-presidént of plaintiff, and did on or about May 21, 1891, write in reference to some note which defendant’s president proposed sending “to obtain this loan, as I understood it.” In this letter he gave his opinion of certain notes, and the value of defendant’s stock, etc. The $25,000 note was made by four of the directors of defendant and its cashier. In sending on the collaterals to Chicago, Collins, the president of defendant, wrote to Gage that he believed they were, “in substance, about what was spoken of at the Coronado Hotel [where the negotiations had occurred] when Mr. Norcross was with us.” Upon the receipt of these collaterals, of which there seems to have been a considerable number, plaintiff
Defendant at the trial objected to the testimony in reference to negotiations on the part of plaintiff and defendant for a loan of money by the former to defendant, and that the latter received the funds, upon the ground that it was immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent, and that it tended to vary and contradict the written instrument, to wit, the promissory note for $25,000 already in evidence. We do not see that it did anything of the kind. The third cause of action was for money loaned by plaintiff to defendant. This evidence tended to support that cause of action; and the fact that defendant contended that it was not a loan by plaintiff but a purchase of the promissory note in question, did not militate against the admissibility of the evidence.
On the nineteenth- day of October, 1891, the defendant, having paid the interest on the loan and $12,500 of the principal, made its promissory note for the remaining $12,500, payable thirty days after date, with interest, etc. This note was signed as follows: “California National Bank of San Diego, per J. W. Collins, Pres.” Appellant contends that this note is not shown to have been authorized by the board of directors of the defendant, and that the president of the defendant, not having been specially empowered so to do, could not bind the defendant by making this note. Respondents meet this contention : (1) By reference to the record, which shows that at a meeting of the board of directors of defendant “held in February, 1891, a resolution was passed by the board of directors to authorize Mr. Collins, the president, to borrow $100,000 from some eastern national bank.” The record also shoAvs that in January, 1891, J. W. Collins was elected president, and that section 19 of the by-laws of defendant requires ‘ ‘ all contracts, checks, drafts, etc., shall be signed by the president, vice-president, or cashier.” (2) Authorization implied from course of conduct of business of defendant. (3) That defendant, having received and retained the consideration for which the note AA'as given, with notice, is estopped from deny
We concur: Temple, C.; Belcher, C.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.