85 Cal. 559 | Cal. | 1890
This action was commenced against Sewell Knapp, in his lifetime, to recover $493.81 for goods sold and delivered to him by 1.1ST. Miller, the latter having assigned his demand to the plaintiff. After having answered, denying the sale and delivery of the goods and his indebtedness to Miller, Sewell Knapp died, and his executrix, Caroline Knapp, was regularly substituted as defendant, on motion of defendant’s counsel. The case was tried by the court on the original pleadings, it being expressly admitted by the defendant on the trial that the claim had been presented to the executrix for allowance in due time, and that she had refused to act upon it. The trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiff for the sum demanded, against the executrix absolutely, and independently of “ due course of administration.” The appeal is from the judgment, and, from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.
1. The judgment should have been made payable in
2. Appellant’s counsel contend that, inasmuch as the complaint was not amended after the substitution of the executrix, by adding thereto an averment that the claim had been regularly presented to and rejected by the executrix, it is insufficient to support the judgment. But as no such objection was made in the court below, and as defendant expressly admitted on the trial that the claim had been presented to the executrix in due time, and that she had refused to act upon it, and made no objection on the ground that it was not presented in due form, it is too late to make the objection that the presentation and rejection of the claim were not alleged in the complaint, for the first time, on this appeal. (Hentsch v. Porter, 10 Cal. 555; Coleman v. Woodworth, 28 Cal. 568; Bank v. Howland, 42 Cal. 130; Drake v. Foster, 52 Cal. 225.) The object of the statutory requirement of presentation and rejection of claims against estates, as a condition precedent to the commencement of suits upon them, is to save to estates of deceased persons the costs and expenses of useless suits, — suits to recover what would have been allowed and paid by the executor or administrator without suit. The merits of such claims do not depend in any degree upon their presentation and rejection before suit. The defense that a claim had not been presented and rejected before suit does not question either the validity or the maturity of the claim, but simply challenges the remedy by suit, on the ground that another remedy provided by law has priority, and should be exhausted before commencement of suit. In other words, that the demand, or some part thereof, should be disputed and rejected, in the mode prescribed by law, before the commencement of suit. For these reasons, it has been decided in the cases above cited that the de
3. It is contended that the finding that Miller, plaintiff’s assignor, sold and delivered the goods to Knapp, -defendant’s testator, is not justified by the evidence, and I think this point is well taken. The goods alleged to have been sold and delivered by Miller to Knapp consisted of wheat, flour, bran, and middlings, delivered at different times in 1886, viz., March 24th, April 7th, and May 8th, and are admitted to have been the property of Gr. W. Hale, unless he had sold them to Miller before they were delivered to Knapp. Plaintiff claims that Miller purchased the goods from Hale before the alleged sale and delivery to Knapp; but' the defendant denies this, and contends that Knapp purchased the goods from Hale, and that Miller, as the agent and teamster of Hale, •merely hauled and delivered them to Knapp for Hale. 'It appears that both Hale and Miller had running open accounts with Knapp during the time the goods were being delivered, and that Knapp credited the goods to Hale’s account, on his books, at the times of delivery. "It is admitted that, before and during the time the goods -were being delivered to Knapp, Miller was in the employ .of Hale as teamster, driving Hale’s team, of which it appears ■ that Knapp had notice. It also appears that -the goods had been deposited and stored by Hale while he owned them in Tulloch’s mill, at Knight’s Perry, and -thence the greater part of them were hauled directly to "Knapp’s store, by Miller. But it appears that, by some •means not disclosed, about one fifth part of the goods had been “ left with Mr. Preston [presumably the plain-tiffj, in his warehouse at Jamestown,” by whom, and
At this point six receipts to Tulloch, of different dates, signed “ G. W. Hale, per I. N. Miller,” were produced, and the witness and plaintiff’s counsel admitted that they were the receipts given by Miller for the goods in question. As to the sale and delivery by Miller to Knapp, Miller testified: “ I hauled a load to Mr. Knapp’s at his [Knapp’s] request, and delivered it on my account to him; delivered the items set out in that account. [Plaintiff’s exhibit 0.] Some of this wheat and these other goods were left with Mr. Preston in his warehouse at Jamestown. They were afterwards delivered to Mr. Knapp upon my account, before he died. They are my goods at the present time. Hale and I were not interested in the goods. I did not tell Mr. Knapp that they „
Considering all the circumstances, I think the evidence on the part of the plaintiff was insufficient to prove his case, even prima facie. It depends entirely upon the testimony of Miller, which, taken as a whole, seems to be both inconsistent and unreliable. That he “became the owner ” of the goods is his legal conclusion from the facts that Hale authorized him to sell the property and apply the proceeds of the sale to the payment of Hale’s indebtedness to him, amounting to $111. The goods had not been actually nor constructively delivered to him before the time he says he became the owner of them, nor at any time before they were delivered to Knapp. The quantity of none of the different kinds of goods of which he says he became the owner—wheat, flour, bran, and middlings — had been ascertained or designated by weight, measure, or otherwise, nor separated from the whole quantity which Hale had stored at Tulloch’s mill; and it seems incredible that it was ever the intention of the parties that Miller should take and become the owner of all Hale’s wheat, flour, etc., stored at Tulloch’s mill, of the market value of $578.81, “in part payment” or in full payment of Hale’s debt of only $111. Miller’s legal conclusion that he became the owner of the goods while they were stored at Tulloch’s mill is only at par with his assertion that he was still the owner of them at the time of the trial. The reliability of Miller’s testimony as to
It follows that the plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon a valid, express promise of Knapp to pay him for the goods. Is the evidence sufficient to prove such a promise? It should be borne in mind that to Knapp, and all others who knew Miller’s relation to Hale to be that of Hale’s servant, as teamster, the acts of Miller in hauling and delivering goods were ostensibly and presumptively the acts of Hale, in the absence of notice to the contrary. Now, the only evidence claimed to have any tendency to prove that Knapp had any notice that Miller owned or claimed the goods, or that he was selling or delivering them on his own account, or that Knapp promised to pay Miller, is the loose, indefinite testimony of Miller. He first testifies that when Hale asked him if he would sell that wheat, and take his pay out of it,— “ I said I would, and Knapp bought it, and said he would settle with me.” Further on he says: “I hauled a load to Mr. Knapp’s at his [Knapp’s] request, and delivered it on my account to him; delivered the items set out in
Gibson, C., and Foote, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are reversed and a new trial granted.
Paterson, J., dissented.