Appellants, Russell O. Shaeffer and Frank Ponke, were the employees of respondent companies. They appeal from a judgment entered in an action brought by their employers for the recovery of funds and from the order of the court denying their motion to vacate the judgment and enter a judgment in their favor. The sole point urged for reversal is that the action was barred by the statute of limitations.
Respondents, Agair Incorporated and Aerial Chemical Corporation, were engaged in a joint venture of operating aircraft for agricultural purposes. Their business, commonly known as " crop dusting, ’ ’ consisted of the application of insecticides, fertilizer and seeds from aircraft. Appellant Shaeffer was the manager of the Chico office of the joint venture, and appellant Ponke was an airplane pilot. Both were employed under oral contracts. Shaeffer was paid a monthly advance of $350 and was to receive a percentage of the profits from the Chico office, after certain deductions had been calculated. For his services
Respondents maintained a bank account in Chico where proceeds from the Chico operation were deposited. This account was used mainly as a conduit for the transfer of funds to the headquarters of respondents, although small bills were paid from it. Appellant Shaeifer was permitted in a limited way to draw checks on this account. For checks other than in payment of small items of expense, he was required to obtain authorization from an officer of respondent companies.
On June 15, 1957, both appellants left respondents' employ. Shortly thereafter, it was ascertained that between April 15 and June 7, 1957, appellant Shaeifer, without authorization or even knowledge on the part of respondents, had written four checks in substantial amounts which were paid out of said business account. Two of the checks in the gross amount of $4,500 had been made payable to Shaeifer, or his wife, and the two other checks in the total sum of $3,850 to appellant Ponke.
This action was commenced on February 29,1960, more than two years after either the drawing of said cheeks or the termination of the employment, and more than two years after respondents had discovered the fact of the payments. A trial was had on the issues before the court sitting with a jury in an advisory capacity, and thereafter findings were made in favor of respondents and adverse to appellants’ contentions. Judgment was entered accordingly.
Appellants assert that the causes of action against them were barred by the provisions of subdivision 1 of section 339 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the two-year statute governing actions on unwritten obligations. 1 They base their contentions upon allegations in the amended complaint that appellants had been employed under an oral contract and that the drawing of the cheeks was in violation of their agreement. Since the trial court specifically found the allegations of the amended complaint to be true and predicated judgment thereon, it is argued that said subdivision 1 of section 339 must apply.
Respondents’ position, and the one obviously accepted by the trial court, was that the action fell within the provisions of subdivision 4 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the three-year statute, where relief is sought on the ground of
In ruling upon the applicability of the statute of limitations, a court will look to the nature of the rights sued upon rather than to the form of action or to the relief demanded.
(Day
v.
Greene,
The sufficiency of the evidence to support the facts found by the court is not questioned, and, in any event, according to the well known rule on appeal, would have to be considered in a light most favorable to the judgment. The trial court found that all proceeds from the operation at Chico were the property of respondents; that appellant Shaeffer had no authority to draw the cheeks in question from respondents’ bank account; that appellant Shaeffer’s authority to draw on the account was limited to the payment of miscellaneous small items of expense, commonly known as petty cash; that the checks payable to Shaeffer, his wife, and Ponke were signed
The basic situation of fact disclosed by these findings show an employee having dominion over his employers’ funds, exercising it in an unauthorized manner, and thereby obtaining for himself and another employee substantial sums of money to which they were not entitled. The substantive right infringed was the violation of a confidential relationship by misappropriation of property and not the breach of an oral contract of employment.
Causes of action arising under such circumstances properly fall within the three-year statute provided by subdivision 4 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This is true, even though there may be involved in some cases the breach of an oral agreement, provided that the gravamen of such actions is either actual or constructive fraud
3
or mistake. It exists when conduct, though not actually fraudulent, has all actual consequences and all legal effects of actual fraud.
(Devers
v.
Greenwood,
Appellants rely upon
Jefferson
v.
J. E. French Co.,
A person receiving the property of another by reason of fraud or mistake is unjustly enriched thereby, and the right of the owner to recover will not be defeated merely because there was an oral contract between them in some way involving the property. The proper statute limiting such actions is subdivision 4 of section 338. This is in harmony with the holding that section 339, subdivision 1, is not applicable to an action specifically covered by some other code section.
(Automobile Ins. Co.
v.
Union Oil Co.,
One further matter requires consideration, although not
At the pretrial conference the issue of the statute of limitations was revived in the contentions presented, and the pretrial order specifically set forth and listed the statute as an issue in the case. The pretrial conference order is a part of the record and where inconsistent with the pleadings supersedes them. Unless modified it controls the subsequent course of the case. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 216;
Aero Bolt & Screw Co.
v.
Iaia,
We have concluded, notwithstanding these difficulties in the record, that the judgment should be upheld. It is,
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Pierce, P. J., and Friedman, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 21,1965.
Notes
Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Section 339 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads in part: "Within two years. 1. An action upon a contract, obligation or liability not founded upon an instrument of writing, . . .
Section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads, in part: ‘‘Within three years:
‘ ‘ 4. An action for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake. The cause of action in such case not to be deemed to have accrued until the discovery, by the aggrieved party, of the facts constituting the fraud or jnistakg."
Section 1573 of the Civil Code reads: ‘‘Constructive fraud consists:
“1. In any breach of duty which, without an actually fraudulent intent, gains an advantage to the person in fault, or any one claiming under him, by misleading another to his prejudice, or to the prejudice of any one claiming under him;....”
