121 P. 726 | Cal. | 1912
The justices of the district court of appeal for the first appellate district being unable to agree upon a decision in the above entitled cause, it was certified to this court for determination.
Justice Kerrigan of the court of appeals had prepared the following opinion, which, meeting and expressing, as it does, the views of this court, is hereby adopted as its opinion, and for the reasons therein stated the judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
"This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant and from an order denying plaintiff's motion for a new trial.
"On July 1, 1904, Cain, Boyd Corriea, a corporation, was, upon petition of its creditors, declared and adjudged to be a bankrupt, and subsequently the plaintiff was duly elected trustee of said bankrupt. On June 10, 1904, the bankrupt had a considerable balance to its credit with the defendant bank, and the account was closed and balanced by the bank by charging to the account a note executed in its favor by Cain, Boyd Corriea. The bankrupt was originally a co-partnership doing business in this state under the firm name of Cain, Boyd Corriea, but afterwards was incorporated, and conducted business under the same identical name, and was composed of the old firm members with the exception of two nominal holders of two shares of stock. The indebtedness to the bank arose in the following manner: On January 27, 1903, Cain, a member of the said firm, and his wife, to secure a personal loan to Cain, executed a mortgage in favor of the bank, which mortgage among other provisions recited that it was given to secure `the repayment of all other and further advances made or which may in the future be made by said mortgagee . . . to the firm of Cain, Boyd Corriea.' On February 2, 1903, the defendant bank loaned the firm of Cain, Boyd Corriea the sum of $2,000, taking their note for this sum. After the firm was incorporated the note was marked `Paid,' and surrendered by the bank to the corporation, and $100 having been paid on account thereof a new note dated June 4, 1904, was made in favor of the bank for $1,900. Both of these notes bore the same signature, i.e., Cain, Boyd Corriea. Eleven days after the giving of this note, and immediately prior to the institution of the proceedings *184 in bankruptcy of the corporation, the bank applied the amount on deposit to the credit of the corporation to the payment of this note, which application still left due thereon a balance of $56.40, which Cain personally paid in cash three days later. The manager of the bank testified that it was in consideration of the mortgage security that any money at all was loaned to the firm. It is also to be observed that the bank has never made any release of the mortgage.
"The plaintiff contends that the indebtedness represented by the note was secured by this mortgage, and that therefore the bank had no right to charge this note to the deposit account. It seems to be conceded — as indeed it must be — that if the mortgage given by Cain and his wife still subsists, and is security for the indebtedness represented by the second note, the bank had no right to apply the deposit to its payment. This was squarely decided in the case of McKean v. German Savings Bank,
"This is the doctrine, too, where the mortgage was not given by the debtor himself but by a third party (Commercial Bank v.Kershner,
"These observations bring us to the first question in the case, namely, was the debt due the bank evidenced by the second note secured by the mortgage given by Cain and his wife?
"We think it was. It is a settled principle of law in this state and one often recognized that the taking of a note, either of the debtor or of a third person for a pre-existing debt, is not payment, unless it is distinctly understood that the note is taken as such. The note only postpones the time of payment of the old debt until default is made in payment of the *185
note. In Griffith v. Grogan,
"So in Brown v. Olmsted,
"In Welch v. Allington,
"To digress for a moment, it must be observed that in the case at bar the note we are now discussing — the second one given to the bank — bore no corporate seal, and did not purport to be signed by any officer of the corporation. Both *186 notes bore the same signature, — namely, `Cain, Boyd Corriea.' The books of the bank and the method of keeping the account underwent no change by reason of the incorporation. This incorporation was had as a matter of convenience, and no change took place in the business or in the personnel of the proprietors. For these reasons it is claimed by the plaintiff that, so far as the bank is concerned, the firm and the corporation should be regarded as one entity. But the necessities of the case require no consideration of that point, and we may return to the discussion where we dropped it a moment ago, for even treating the firm and the corporation as two separate and distinct entities, we have the corporation — a third party, taking up the note of the maker, and giving in its place its own note, without any understanding or agreement that the latter was accepted in payment of the original indebtedness, so that this case falls squarely within the rule laid down in the cases just cited.
"The mortgage in this case in express terms was made to secure the payment of an indebtedness and not of any particular note, and was still available for that purpose at the time the defendant applied to the reduction of that indebtedness the amount standing on its books to the credit of the corporation, and the form by which that indebtedness was evidenced was not important.
"This was held to be the law in London San Francisco Bank v.Bandman,
"We pass to another point in the case. Uncontradicted evidence was given that $1500 of the $2,000 loan represented the amount that Cain had agreed to contribute to the capital of the firm, and to that extent he was in fact the principal; but ignoring this argument, and treating Cain as a surety as to the whole loan, still as the transaction was not altered in any respect without his consent he was not, as suggested by respondent, exonerated. A surety is exonerated when, without his consent, `the original obligation of the principal is altered in any respect, or the remedies or rights of the creditor against the principal in respect thereto are in any way impaired or suspended.' (Civ. Code, secs.
"Finally, the defendant was the bank with which the corporation transacted its banking business, and must have known of its embarrassed financial condition. The second note was taken only eleven days before the institution of the bankruptcy proceedings. These circumstances, together with the haste with which the bank account was offset by the note, lead us to believe that the bank, in applying the corporation's deposit to the payment of the note, knew that it was availing itself of a preference over other creditors of the corporation. Therefore, if it was necessary for a decision in the case, we would have no hesitation in holding that the bank's action constituted the obtaining of a preference, and having occurred within four months of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, that it was void under the Bankruptcy Act. (Collier on Bankruptcy, p. 471.)" *188