This is an appeal from a judgment for plaintiffs, entered pursuant to a motion for a directed verdict. Plaintiffs sued the defendant on a common count for money had and received. Defendant was the attorney appointed by the Danish consul to represent plaintiffs in collecting certain moneys due from estates. Plaintiffs had executed a power of attorneys to the Danish Home Office in Denmark, which was forwarded to the Danish consul in San Francisco, who in turn appointed defendant and gave him the power of attorney. Defendant admitted this procedure and that at all times he knew that he was representing plaintiffs. Defendant attempted tó set off in this action certain claims alleged to be due him from the Danish government; also from other foreign heirs for collecting moneys for them from other estates. He also contends that by virtue of the sovereign character of liis employer, the Danish consul, he is not amenable to plaintiffs in such a proceeding. He also bases his’ contention upon the grounds that they, as principals, have no right to proceed against him as a subagent.
The recent case of Estate of Clausen, 202 Cal. 267 [
Appellant then contends that the plaintiffs, who have the character of principals, have no right to proceed in this form against the defendant,' who is a subagent. We are not impressed by this contention for the reason that there is no insistence in the law of agency in this state that there be a privity of contract between the principal and the subagent to authorize the principal to proceed against the subagent as a beneficiary in fact of the contract of agency between the agent and the subagent. (Marshall v. Swaim,
The third person’s right is not based on “an assumptual obligation created by the contract”, but on “an obligation in the nature of an assumpsit created by law from the facts of the case. In other words, we here perceive a manifestation” of an obligation created by law, often referred to as a quasi contract. (2 Street, Foundations of Legal Liability, 161.) The leading ease of Brewer v. Dyer,
We are also unable to agree with appellant to the effect that a set-off is proper in a proceeding like the one considered. It is elementary that a set-off may not be invoked unless the parties and the debts are mutual and that the doctrine of mutuality requires that the debts be due to and from the same persons in the same capacity. (23 Cal. Jur. 262; Kaye v. Metz,
We have already concluded that the Kingdom of Denmark does not properly appear as a party to the proceeding in its sovereign capacity by virtue of the ruling in Estate of Clausen and Estate of Ghio, supra. The compensation that the defendant demands by way of set-off is properly an action incident to his contract of employment with the Danish consul as attorney for the Kingdom of Denmark, acting in its sovereign capacity, through its consul; or on powers of attorney from other heirs in other estates. We must conclude, therefore, that the claim defendant asserts against the Danish government for compensation for services rendered to it or other foreign heirs is not properly set off against the claim of plaintiffs in this proceeding, because of the lack of mutuality of interests and parties.
It must also be concluded that the trial court did not err in directing a verdict for plaintiffs, because none of the testimony offered by the defendant in any way controverted the material issues developed by the plaintiffs.' There is but one conclusion from the evidence as presented, giving full force and effect to that of the defendant, to the effect that judgment should lie against the defendant for the benefit of the plaintiffs for the amount of money
In directing a verdict for plaintiffs, however, the trial court refused to allow them interest on their respective claims, and they have taken a separate appeal from that portion of the judgment, which has this day been decided in favor of plaintiffs, with directions to the trial court to revise and re-enter its judgment in accordance with the views therein expressed. (Petersen v. Lyders, post, p. 307 [
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on July 14, 1934, and an application by respondents to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on August 13, 1934,
