189 P. 132 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
The plaintiff appeals from a judgment in its favor for the sum of $68.58 with interest, and which excluded an item of six hundred dollars and interest for money loaned by plaintiff to defendant and included in an open book account. The appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to justify the court's finding to the effect that the cause of action on said item of six hundred dollars is barred by subdivision I of section
[1] The defendant was a stockholder and director of plaintiff corporation and was also an employee of the plaintiff. That an open book account did exist between them, consisting of various items, is a fact beyond controversy. While the account was running and unsettled, the defendant found it necessary to borrow the sum of six hundred dollars to enable him to make a payment on account of the purchase by him of certain real property. As shown by his own testimony, he obtained the money from the plaintiff for the purpose above stated. He did not ask the plaintiff to charge the item on the books, but did not object to it so doing. "I have been having items charged to me on the books of account there for some time. I was familiar with the facts that an account was kept. . . . I expected it to be charged to me. I expected it, made a loan of it. I didn't know whether it would be charged in that book account or not. They would have to make a record of it. I didn't know of any place else they would make a record of it." Defendant further testified that "there was nothing said about paying *227 it back, in any way, shape, or form; as I remember it, there was nothing said about interest." The plaintiff's witness, Irwin H. Rice, through whom the loan was made, testified that the defendant said that he needed six hundred dollars and thought it would be just as well if he would take it out of the company and pay the company interest on it at the rate of six per cent. On this evidence the court found that the defendant agreed to pay interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, and that said loan and interest so agreed to be paid was not a proper subject of book account, although the same was regularly entered in said open book account. In rendering judgment the court's theory apparently was that because the transaction was a loan upon a direct promise to pay the same with interest, and because the business of lending money was not one of the purposes for which plaintiff corporation was organized, that therefore this transaction could not be the subject of open book account between the plaintiff and defendant.
In Mercantile Trust Co. v. Doe,
That part of the judgment from which plaintiff appealed is reversed.
Shaw, J., and James, J., concurred.