273 P. 871 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
This is an action brought by plaintiff, who is appellant herein, for money held by defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company, as a fund for the redemption of certain collateral trust notes, and to quiet title to the fund as against the other defendants. The collateral notes were issued by North American Dredging Company of Texas. The Title Insurance and Trust Company, a California corporation of Los Angeles, was the trustee holding the collateral by which the notes were secured, which were by their terms payable at the office of the Title Insurance and Trust Company in Los Angeles.
The complaint alleges that ever since the first day of January, 1915, the plaintiff has been the owner of seven of these collateral trust notes, which are numbered respectively 104, 105, 210, 211, 394, 428, and 565; that notes numbered 104, 105, 210, and 211 are for the principal sum of $1,000 each; that notes numbered 394 and 428 are for $500 each, and that note numbered 565 is for $125; that the aggregate amount of the principal and accrued interest of the seven notes is $9,000; that all of the notes have matured and that the defendant North American Dredging Company of Texas *95 has deposited with defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company a fund in the sum of $9,000 for the purpose of redeeming these collateral trust notes, which sum is still held by the Trust Company. The complaint further alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of this fund. It is further alleged in the complaint that on February 18, 1915, the plaintiff delivered all of these notes to the defendant George C. Morgan, Jr., at Oakland, as its agent, with instructions to negotiate and secure a loan for the plaintiff and to use the notes as security therefor; that at the same time Morgan agreed in writing with the plaintiff that in the event such loan should not be negotiated he would thereupon return the notes to plaintiff; that Morgan never negotiated the loan and never returned the notes; that at the time Morgan came into the possession of the notes he was a resident of Alameda County, but that for several years last past he has been absent from the state; that the notes 210 and 211 are in the possession of the defendant Mrs. Kendall Morgan.
By the complaint, plaintiff offers to give the defendant Title Insurance Company such indemnity as the court may deem proper and asks judgment against the Trust Company for the amount of the fund, upon giving such indemnity as the court may direct, and prays that plaintiff's title to the fund be quieted as to the other defendants. The summons and complaint were served on the defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company on February 17, 1925, and it filed its answer May 1, 1925.
The defendants Mrs. Kendall Morgan and George C. Morgan, Jr., both resided out of the state of California, the former residing in Detroit, Michigan, and the latter in Springfield, Massachusetts.
After defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company had been served and filed its answer, the plaintiff filed an affidavit for publication of summons and secured an order directing that service be made on defendants Mrs. Kendall Morgan and George C. Morgan, Jr., by publication of the summons, which summons was thereafter published and mailed in accordance with the order of the court. The answer of defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company alleges that the security held under the trust agreement, at the request of the North American Dredging Company *96 of Texas, was reconveyed to such company and released under such trust agreement upon deposit by it of a fund to redeem these notes; that the Trust Company held this fund pursuant to a trust agreement for the account of the legal owner and holder, or owners and holders, of the notes and respective interest coupons and for payment to such person or persons upon due surrender of such notes and coupons to defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company for cancellation. Mrs. Kendall Morgan appeared and filed an answer and cross-complaint, alleging her ownership of notes 210 and 211 for $1,000 each, and praying judgment against defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company for the amount of the principal and accrued interest. The plaintiff and the Trust Company filed answers to the cross-complaint of Mrs. Kendall Morgan.
The case came on for trial on January 18, 1926. On the day of the trial the defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company filed an amendment to its answer setting up therein that George C. Morgan, Jr., is a necessary party to the action; that he is not within the state of California and therefore the court has no jurisdiction of any property or any choses in action belonging to such defendant. At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company moved the court for a nonsuit on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action. The court granted the motion for nonsuit and entered judgment in favor of Mrs. Kendall Morgan on her cross-complaint against Title Insurance and Trust Company for the amount of the principal and accrued interest of the two notes held by her, and quieting her title to the two notes and the amount of principal and interest due as against the plaintiff. Three thousand five hundred forty-seven dollars of the fund deposited by the North American Dredging Company has been deposited with the trial court by stipulation of respective counsel pending the outcome of this appeal, such being the amount of the judgment in favor of the defendant Mrs. Kendall Morgan. From both the judgment of nonsuit and the judgment in favor of Mrs. Kendall Morgan plaintiff has appealed.
[1] Appellant urges that the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action; that the fund was within the state of California and in the possession of the defendant *97 Title Insurance and Trust Company, which defendant had been served and had filed its answer; that this service and appearance conferred jurisdiction of the subject matter, and that the service thereafter by publication gave jurisdiction of George C. Morgan, Jr., for the purpose of disposing of the fund.
The question presented by this objection is not a new one in this state. In State of California v. Security Sav. Bank,
Respondent relies principally on the holding in Belcher v.Chambers,
[2] On the appeal from the judgment in favor of respondent Mrs. Kendall Morgan it may be said that the collateral notes transferred to her by her husband, who received them from George C. Morgan, Jr., were not negotiable, being issued January 1, 1915, before the present negotiable instruments law was enacted. The notes are payable to bearer and contain a provision that they are "subject to the terms and conditions contained in the trust *100
agreement dated January 1, 1915, and executed between the company and the Title Insurance and Trust Company, as trustee; and all the rights of the holder thereof are subject to the provisions of said trust agreement." Article VIII of the trust agreement covers "Default and Remedies," and contains provisions not certain of fulfillment. Thus section 2 of the article provides: "If one of the events of default shall occur, the Trustee may, and upon the written request of the holders of twenty-five per centum (25%) in amount of the notes issued hereunder then outstanding, shall, by notice in writing delivered to the company, declare the principal of all notes issued hereunder, then outstanding, to be due and payable forthwith." Section
Popp v. Exchange Bank,
[3] While it is true that the legislature, by an act which took effect on August 8, 1915, so amended our code with relation to negotiable instruments as to make the notes here negotiable, the law in force at the time the contract is made must apply with respect to its interpretation, "otherwise the legislature would itself make a contract for the parties." (1 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 871; Popp v. Exchange Bank, supra.)
[4] The notes in question being non-negotiable, in order that plaintiff be estopped from denying the agents authority to sell or dispose of them, it must appear that plaintiff had clothed its agent, George C. Morgan, Jr., with some authority to do so. According to the record the authority of George C. Morgan, Jr., to do anything with the collateral trust notes, other than to return them to plaintiff, ceased when he received the notes from the bank, upon the loan being paid with money furnished by plaintiff. His authority in the first instance was limited to pledging them to the Bank of Los Gatos. The plaintiff demanded them from him but never received them. Upon the record in its present state plaintiff is not, therefore, estopped to assert ownership. (Chase v. Whitmore,
[5] We are of the opinion that the court should have admitted the declarations of defendant George C. Morgan, Jr., made while in possession of the notes, as the declarations against interest by one in possession of personal property are admissible against his successors in interest. (Smith v. Goethe,
Under the view we have taken it is unnecessary to discuss appellant's exception to the ruling of the court sustaining *102 the objection to the introduction in evidence of the note and collateral agreement for which the notes in question were pledged as security, as the objection was sustained upon the theory that the coupon notes were negotiable, and that the court had no jurisdiction of George C. Morgan, Jr.
The judgments are reversed and the cause remanded.
Knight, Acting P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred.