84 Cal. 263 | Cal. | 1890
On the ninth day of June, 1885, the deceased, D. Finley, entered into a written contract with the board of state harbor commissioners, whereby he agreed to repair (re-face) two sections of the sea-wall on the water-front of the city of San Francisco, the work to be commenced within twenty days and to be completed! within one hundred and fifty days from date of the agreement. The work was to be paid for by drafts on the harbor improvement fund, upon monthly estimates of the value of the material used and of the work performed at the rates agreed upon; seventy-five per cent of such value to be paid monthly, and the remaining twenty-five per cent to be paid when the work should be completed. The contract contained the provision that it should not be assignable without the written consent of the board, party of the first part.
During the progress of the work, Finley, for the purpose of obtaining money to carry on the work, borrowed
On February 8, 1886, Finley executed to plaintiff a writing, of which the following is a copy:—
“San Francisco, February 8, 1886.
“To All Whom This may Concern: I hereby assign,' transfer, and set over to W. H. Norton, or assigns, all moneys due me, or which may become due to me, on any Work I may perform. And this assignment to remain good and in full force until all notes due, or which are to become due, to W. H. Norton, or his assigns, from me are paid, and when said notes are paid this instrument to be null and void. David Finley.”
On March 27,1886, Finley executed to plaintiff a power of attorney, of which the following is a copy:—
“Whereas, I, David Finley, of the city and county of San Francisco, state of California, did, on the ninth day of June, A. D. 1885, enter into a contract with the board of state harbor commissioners of the state of California to re-face the outer slope of sections one (1) and two (2) of the sea-wall on the water-front of the city and county of San Francisco, state of California;
“And whereas I am now desirous that all moneys that have become or may become due to me' by reason of my performance of said contract shall be paid to W. H. Norton of said city and county,—
“ Now, therefore, to carry out my said desire, I appoint said W. IT. Norton my true and lawful attorney, irrevocable, for me, and in my name, place, and stead, to collect and receive all sums of money which are or shall be due, owing, or payable to me by reason of my performance of said contract made by me with said board of state harbor commissioners as aforesaid.
*266 “ Giving and granting unto my said attorney full power and authority in and about the premises, and in my name to make, execute, and deliver all and every receipt and instrument required to the secretary of said board, or to said board, hereby ratifying, confirming, and holding valid all that my said attorney shall lawfully do by virtue of these presents.
“In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this twenty-seventh day of March, A. D. 1886. “ David Finley, [seal.] ”
On October 4,1886, Finley gave plaintiff the following letter of introduction: —
“ San Francisco, Oct. 4, 1886. “George Tilgham, Esq., Secretary Board of State Harbor Commissioners.
“Sir,—This will introduce to you Mr. W. H. Norton, whom I hereby empower (and to whom I have given a special power of attorney) to receive and receipt for all warrants for money due me on my contracts with the board of state harbor commissioners for facing up sections 1 and 2 of the sea-wall with rocks. “ David Finley.”
On November 9, 1886, before the work was completed, Finley died intestate, and the defendant Whitehead was appointed administrator of his estate, and, as such administrator, Whitehead completed the work on the seawall according to the contract and to the satisfaction of the board of harbor commissioners.
At the time of the commencement of this action twenty-five per cent of the contract price of the work remained unpaid, amounting to $3,225.
The plaintiff claims that Finley was indebted to him at the time of his death, and at the time the work was completed, on account of said loans, in a sum more than equal to the $3,225 balance due for said work, and the principal object of this action is to compel the board of
The defendants contended that plaintiff was not entitled to this relief, and that the warrant for the unpaid balance due on the contract should be drawn in favor of the administrator of Finley’s estate.
The court gave judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendants appeal from the judgment, and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.
Among the findings of fact by the court are the following: “That during the progress of said work said Finley, for the purpose of obtaining money to complete said contract, borrowed from the plaintiff the sum of $2,111.46, and gave plaintiff the promissory notes mentioned in the amended complaint herein, and in May and June, 1886, the further sum of $239.40, for which no note was given; that said Finley employed the said plaintiff as foreman of said work and agreed to pay the reasonable value of said services, and that the reasonable value of said services is the sum of $768.75; that to secure the said sums of $2,111.46 and $768.75 said Finley assigned to plaintiff all the moneys due or to grow due on said contract, and made, constituted, and appointed said plaintiff his attorney in fact, by a power of attorney, irrevocable, and coupled with an interest to collect and receive the money due or to grow due on said contract, and that there is due plaintiff for the performance of said contract, for money so advanced, and for labor so performed the sum of $2,880.15, together with interest on the said sum of $1,572 from May 2, 1886, at the rate of one per cent per mouth, and on said sum of $300 from June 21, 1886, at the rate of one per cent per month, making a total interest of $346.96, no part of which, principal or interest, has been paid, and that there is due from the said board of state harbor commissioners on said contract the sum of $3,225; that on the ninth day
The only attack worthy of consideration made upon these findings is based upon the ground that the evidence does not justify the finding of the assignment by Finley to plaintiff of the former’s right to the money to become due on the sea-wall contract, and particularly of the last installment of twenty-five per cent thereof, as security or otherwise.
To sustain this finding it is necessary to show that the power of attorney from Finley to plaintiff was so coupled with an interest as to prevent its revocation by the death of Finley; and whether it was so, or not, is the pivotal question in the case.
I think the assignment of February 8, 1886, the power of attorney, with its recitals, of March 17, 1886, and the letter of introduction to the secretary of the board, of October 4, 1886, construed in the light of the circumstances under which they were executed, and the subsequent conduct of the parties in relation thereto, as proved by J. M. Polk, A. C. Paulsell, J. C. L. Wadsworth, and John H. Wise, are sufficiently evincive of an assignment, legal or equitable, giving plaintiff an “interest in the subject-matter over or concerning which the power was to be exercised.” (Frink v. Roe, 70 Cal. 309; Hunt v. Rousmanier, 8 Wheat. 175.)
The subject-matter upon which the power was to be exercised was “all moneys that have become or may become due to me [Finley] by reason of my performance of said contract,” which I desire “shall be paid to W. H. Norton [plaintiff] of said city and county.” At
It is contended by appellants’ counsel that the security by this assignment was limited to notes in existence at the time it was made, and that all such notes had been paid before the execution of the power of attorney. But the language seems broad enough to embrace notes thereafter to be made; and in view of the circumstances under which it was made, and the subsequent conduct of the parties, I think the trial court properly so construed it. It was deposited with the secretary of the board of harbor commissioners as evidence of plaintiff’s right to all moneys to become due to Finley, and it was allowed to remain there, after the power of attorney was executed, and until after the death of Finley; and the evidence strongly tends to show that the power of attorney was in like manner deposited with the secretary of the board.
If the assignment had fully discharged its functions, or was to be superseded by the power of attorney, why was it not delivered up or canceled when the power of attorney was executed? At the time the assignment was made, plaintiff was on Finley’s bond for the performance of the contract, and was “ backing him ” with money to enable him to perform it; and the defendant, Whitehead, testified that Finley was indebted to Norton all the time during the year 1886.
It is to be fairly inferred from the evidence that it was the continuous understanding between plaintiff and Finley that the former was to furnish, from time to time, all money necessary to carry on the work until it was
The power of attorney itself indicates more than that plaintiff was empowered to receive the money merely as Finley’s agent. The second recital indicates that the object of the power was to enable plaintiff thereby to obtain payment of money due him. The language of this recital is out of place, and entirely superfluous, if nothing more was intended than to empower plaintiff to receive the money as Finley’s agent.
The power of attorney also provides that it is irrevocable; and although this is not conclusive, it nevertheless tends to prove that the parties understood that plaintiff had an interest in the subject-matter upon which it was to operate.
Counsel for appellants further contend, on the authority of Hunt v. Rousmanier, 8 Wheat. 175, that conceding that plaintiff had such an interest in'the subject-matter of the power of attorney as would have deprived Finley of the power to revoke it during his lifetime, yet inasmuch as plaintiff, in receiving and receipting for the warrants and money, must have acted in the name of Finley, he could not have done so after Finley’s death.
I think the learned counsel mistaken in assuming that it was necessary that plaintiff should receive or receipt for the warrants or the money in the name of Finley. Upon the construction of the assignment, power of attorney, and letter of October 4th, properly, as I think, given by the trial court, the plaintiff was entitled to receive and receipt for the warrants, or money, in his own name, both before and after the death of Finley; and such receipt, in his own name, in connection with the papers above named, would have protected the board of harbor commissioners and the state against all demands of Finley or his administrator for the same warrants or
By no possibility could the appellants have been injured by the overruling of their objection to admitting in evidence plaintiff’s letter of November 16, 1886, to the board of harbor commissioners. The only effect that letter could have had was to show that, by waiving his right to warrants numbered 64 and 65, dated November 4, 1886, Finley did not waive his right to warrants thereafter to be drawn. There was and is no pretense of any such waiver.
Belcher, C. C., and Foote, C., concurred.
The Court.—For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are affirmed.