166 P. 574 | Idaho | 1917
Respondent brought this action against appellant to recover the sum of $704, which he had theretofore paid appellant for four Kootenai county warrants, drawn on the current expense fund of said county. The $700 represented the face value of the warrants and the $4 the accrued interest.
Respondent alleged in his complaint that he had received the warrants in good faith, and thought that they were valid
A second count is set up in the complaint in substance containing the same allegations as the first, with an additional allegation that at the time of the sale appellant had orally guaranteed that the warrants were good and valid.
A demurrer was interposed to the complaint, which was overruled and appellant filed an answer, specifically denying the allegations of the complaint and setting up as an affirmative defense that at the request of respondent he had sold all of his right, title and interest in and to the warrants to respondent for the sum mentioned in the complaint; that upon the payment of the sum appellant assigned each of the warrants to respondent by writing his name across the back thereof; that his signature was placed on the back of said warrants for the sole purpose of assigning his interest in them to respondent, which respondent knew; that before purchasing said warrants respondent made an investigation on his own behalf of the conditions upon which they had been issued and was fully apprised of all the facts in connection with them, and relied upon his own investigation and not upon any representation or statement of appellant or up'on the sig
The facts, so far as material, are as follows: Some time prior to the 7th day of April, 1914, the board of county commissioners of Kootenai county had undertaken to purchase, for the use of the county assessor, certain plots and estimates of timber, based upon cruises of a portion of a former Indian reservation in said county, and in payment therefor had ordered the auditor to issue county warrants, drawn on the current expense fund of the county, in favor of appellant. On the 7th day of April, 1914, appellant sold, assigned and transferred the warrants to the respondent and received therefor $704, said sum being the face value of the warrants plus the accrued interest, and at the time indorsed his name on the back of each of said warrants. Thereafter an appeal was taken from the order of the board of county commissioners, directing the warrants to be drawn, and the district court, after hearing said appeal, decreed the warrants to be null and void, upon the ground that they were illegally issued. The court instructed the jury to find a verdict in favor of the respondent, which it did and judgment was entered thereon.
This appeal is from the judgment. Appellant’s brief contains seven assignments of error. The solution of the whole ease depends upon the questions raised by the 4th and 5th assignments of error, which are in substance that the court erred in instructing the jury to find a verdict for respondent. The sole question presented is, whether or not, under the circumstances of their sale, the warrants were a good consideration for the money which respondent paid for them.
The evidence shows that there was nothing about the warrants in question to distinguish them from any other Kootenai county warrants, drawn on the current expense fund. The
The same principle was applied at an early day by the California court in the case of Kreutz v. Livingston, 15 Cal. 344. The latter case has been followed in Dashaway Assn. v. Rogers, 79 Cal. 211, 21 Pac. 742; Ehrman v. Rosenthal, 117 Cal. 491, 49 Pac. 460; Gregory v. Clabrough’s Exrs., 129 Cal. 475, 62 Pac. 72.
The principle involved is the one which lies at the very foundation of all qwm-contraetual obligations, and is based primarily upon questions of equity and good conscience. Whenever one party has in his possession money which in equity and good conscience belongs to another, the law raises a promise upon his part.to repay it. The principle is well stated in the portion of the opinion in Kreutz v. Livingston, supra, which quotes in part from the opinion of Parker, C. J., in Hall v. Marston, 17 Mass. 575, as follows:
“The principle of this doctrine is reasonable, and consistent with the character of the action of assumpsit for money had and received. There are many cases in which that action is supported without any privity between the parties other than what is created by law. Whenever one man has in his hands the money of another, which he ought to pay over, he is liable*599 to this action, although he has never seen or heard of the party who has the right. When the fact is proved that he has the money, if he cannot show that he has legal or equitable ground for retaining it, the law creates the privity and the promise. ’ ’
It is clear from the facts and the foregoing authorities that the trial court committed no error in instructing the jury in this case to return a verdict for respondent.
We have examined the other assignments of error and find them without merit. The judgment is therefore affirmed. Costs awarded to respondent.