137 P. 9 | Cal. | 1913
The superintendent of banks, having taken charge of the affairs of the State Savings and Commercial Bank, an insolvent corporation, commenced this action against Adeline Hasshagen upon a promissory note signed by her and payable to said banking corporation. The bank was permitted to intervene. The defendant pleaded want of consideration for the promissory note and fraud in its procurement, these same defenses being urged against the plaintiff and the bank and in her cross-complaint she sought judgment for the cancellation of the note, for recovery of certain of her securities which had been hypothecated with the note, and for moneys which had been collected on said securities. The defendant was given a favorable judgment upon both defenses, and upon her cross-complaint the judgment *388 was in her favor upon all of the issues. Both plaintiff and intervener appeal from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.
The principal contention upon which the appellants ask for a reversal of the superior court's action is that the evidence fails to sustain the findings in favor of the respondent both as to want of consideration and upon the issue of fraud. We will examine the testimony relating to want of consideration, but first we will set down some facts which are shown without contradiction. Mrs. Hasshagen was an old woman, seventy-six years of age, and not accustomed to business transactions. Her son was the president of the banking corporation. W.C. Hays was the manager of the bank. It was admitted that the promissory note, which was for thirty-four thousand dollars, together with a check for nineteen thousand dollars signed by the Hasshagens, was received by the State Savings and Commercial Bank in payment of four promissory notes of W.C. Hays, T.A. Bechtel, C.T. Hasshagen (respondent's son), and F.V. Kington, all officers of the bank, the aggregate amount of the notes being fifty-three thousand dollars. These notes were canceled on June 24, 1909, the date of Mrs. Hasshagen's note to the bank.
Upon the subject of want of consideration the old lady, testifying in her own behalf, said: "Mr. Hays, he came to my house and always begging that I sign the note. I said that I would come down to the bank at another time there. I went to the bank. He said, `I assure you that you will not lose anything by it if you sign this note.'" "I did not receive any money or any property of any kind from Mr. Hays or from any one else for that note. I never knew that the bank held a note of Mr. Hays. I did not know at the time I signed that note that the bank held a note of Mr. Kington's or of Mr. Bechtel.
But appellants seem to rely upon the legal presumption of a consideration arising from the note itself, from the promise of Hays to reimburse Mrs. Hasshagen, from the benefit which she supposed her son would obtain from the transaction and from the cancellation of the four promissory notes. While it is true that the execution of the note *390
imports a consideration, the presumption that a consideration passed for the execution of the instrument is merely prima facie.
It is disputable and may be overcome by direct proof. "But disputable inferences or presumptions, while evidence, are evidence the weakest and least satisfactory. They are allowed to stand, not against the facts they represent, but in lieu of proof of them. The facts being proven contrary to the presumption, no conflict arises; the presumption is simply overcome and dispelled." (Savings Loan Soc. v. Burnett,
Nor did her hope that her son might profit by the use of the note in the purchase of stock from another bank amount to a consideration. Mere motive or inducement or hope of profit is not consideration. "If a motive alone were equivalent to a consideration, every promise made free from fraud, duress and the like, would necessarily be enforceable without any consideration." (Page on Contracts, sec. 275. See, also, 9 Cyc. 320.)
There was, therefore, sufficient evidence to support the court's finding that there was a want of consideration for the note.
Fraud was also sufficiently established. We have adverted to the advanced age of Mrs. Hasshagen and her ignorance of business and her statement that she knew nothing of the existence of the notes which were discharged by the substitution *391
of the note which she had signed and the securities which she had deposited. The court found upon evidence amply sufficient that Hays falsely represented to her that he intended to use her note for the purchase of stock of the National Bank of the Pacific; that his motive was to get her to deposit the securities and sign the note so that he might substitute them for the promissory notes of himself and his codirectors; that he concealed his design from her; that she was ignorant of his true purpose; that at the time of the practicing of the fraud upon her, Hays was the cashier and manager of the bank, and directed its affairs and "that if said cross-complainant had not believed all said representations so made to her as aforesaid by said Hays to be true, or if she had known that her said promissory note and securities were being taken by said corporation in satisfaction of the said note of its said directors, she would not have signed the said note for thirty-four thousand dollars or deposited her aforesaid securities with said bank." A few quotations from her testimony will suffice. "Mr. Hays was always asking me to sign. I think I had signed other papers before for the bank at Mr. Hays's request, but he always came to my house and he sat there and he begged and he begged with reference to some other papers, too, but this paper, Mr. Hays did not give me thirty-four thousand dollars. He didn't give me anything. He promised that I should have my money back again; that is what he promised me. The money that I signed for, or I should not sign the note. Because he would see I would not lose." "Q. . . . what use did you think Mr. Hays or the bank could put that note to? Why did you think he wanted you to sign? A. They wanted for to buy other stock in a bank; that is what they wanted it for. Q. It was your note, thirty-four thousand dollars, that would buy the stock? A. Yes, sir. They would fix it up, so he begged me so much to sign that. Q. Did you expect to get any money or any stock or anything else of value because you had signed that note, or did you expect afterward that they would give you back the note? A. I thought I would not lose anything; I thought Mr. Hays would pay me back again; that is what I thought. I thought Mr. Hays would pay me always; that is what he always told me." "A. . . . He always said I would not lose anything. For which reason *392
I thought I would get everything back. That he would pay up everything again. Mr. Harrison: In other words, whatever your understanding of the transaction was resulted from Mr. Hays's statement to you that you would never lose anything; is that true? A. That is just what I thought; I should not lose anything. He didn't say exactly in what way I would not lose anything. He said he would do so well he would see I should not lose anything at all. He said they would do well. He did not give me any writing. He did not give me any contract in writing. Mr. Harrison: His honor wants to know what you expected Mr. Hays to do with the note? A. Well, I thought they would buy the bank; that is what he told me; he said they would buy the other bank; and he go there, too; to fix it up. Mr. Harrison: He told you something about buying out some other bank, did he? A. Yes, sir." This evidence sufficiently sustains the findings. The effort of the corporation to collect the note instead of returning it according to the promise of Hays is sufficient evidence of that fraud which arose from the making of a promise without intention of performance. (Civ. Code, sec.
Appellants deny the existence of any evidence that the note would not have been signed except for the representations of Hays. Of course, it is a necessary constituent element of actual fraud that the consent of the person defrauded would not have been given save for the false representations. (Civ. Code, sec.
Appellants suggest that Hays was a mere agent and that his fraud is not imputable to his principal. It is to be remembered in the first place that the intervener is the corporation *393
itself and not a transferee, for value. It is also to be kept in mind that Hays was the manager and had general charge of the business of the bank. He "controlled matters involving the policy of the bank and the management of its affairs," as the president testified. It will be presumed in favor of third parties that he communicated his knowledge to his principal of any facts material to the transaction. His knowledge is presumptively that of the bank, and it makes no difference that he took some personal benefit from the fraud. (McKenney v. Ellsworth,
The cross-complainant alleged that respondent hypothecated as security for the note sued upon certain promissory notes, among them a note of the Auburn Motor Car Company for three thousand dollars. The court found that this was true, and appellants contend that absolutely no evidence was introduced showing that the Auburn Motor Car Company note was deposited as security for the note in suit. Mr. Grange testified that Mrs. Hasshagen owned a certain note of the Union State Bank for twelve thousand five hundred dollars, secured by certain instruments, which were the same securities mentioned in the cross-complaint including the note of the Auburn Motor Car Company. S.P. Young testified that there was in the bank a note of the Auburn Motor Car Company for five thousand dollars on which two thousand dollars was paid April 23, 1909, and three thousand dollars July 9, 1909. The letter of the bank's secretary and cashier, Mr. Bechtel, dated July 13, 1909, written to Mr. Harrison and put in evidence by the corporation shows Mrs. Hasshagen's right to a credit of three thousand dollars. These proven facts indicated that the bank had received three thousand dollars upon Mrs. Hasshagen's account from the note of the Auburn Motor Car Company. There was no effort to show that this sum of three thousand dollars had ever been paid to Mrs. Hasshagen, or that the credit was applicable to some other transaction, and we cannot say under all these circumstances that the evidence fails to sustain the finding with reference to this item.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Lorigan, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred. *394