40 Cal. App. 2d 374 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1940
The defendant, California Building and Loan Association, was organized in 1889. It continued to do business down to the 23d day of January, 1933, when it went into liquidation and the defendant Justus Craemer, the then building and loan commissioner, took control. Prior to the date of liquidation each of the plaintiffs had become an investor. In 1929 the State Capital Company was organized. It was organized as an agency of, and for the purpose of assisting the California Mutual Building and Loan Association in the transaction of its business. During the period 1929 to 1931 the agents of the California Mutual Building and Loan Association induced the plaintiffs to exchange their investments in it for shares of stock in State Capital Company. In doing so the plaintiffs claim they were defrauded. On February 26, 1936, they filed a complaint pleading such facts and sought to recover a judgment in damages. They did not allege in their complaint that at any time they presented their claims to the building and loan commissioner. On November 17, 1938, the plaintiffs filed a second amended complaint. It likewise contained no allegation regarding the presentation of claims. T. J. Edwards, claiming to be the owner of a passbook and to have superior rights to the assets of California Mutual Building and Loan Association, filed a complaint in intervention. The second amended complaint and the complaint in intervention were answered and the cause was set down for trial on the 5th day of June, 1939. The plaintiffs called George S. Walker, the then building and loan commissioner, as a witness. Before he had given any testimony the defendants interposed an objection to the taking of any evidence on the ground that the plaintiffs ’ second amended complaint did not state a cause of action. Later that objection was sustained. Still later, on motion of the defendants, the trial court ordered a judgment in their favor on the pleadings in the case. The plaintiffs duly moved for a new trial. That motion was granted. From that order the defendants have appealed.
In their opening brief the defendants contended that the presentation of claims as provided in section 13.16, Act 986,
The defendants contend that the plaintiffs’ complaint was insufficient because the plaintiffs wholly omitted to plead that they presented their claims to the commissioner as required by the provisions of section 13.16, supra. The plaintiffs reply that they were and are “investors” within the terms of said statute and were not bound to present their claims. To that reply the defendants assert it is true the plaintiffs alleged in paragraph III of their pleadings that they were investors, but that in paragraph X they specifically alleged that in 1929-1931 they exchanged their interests for shares of the capital stock in State Capital Company and that such allegation is controlling. (Little v. Union Oil Co., 73 Cal. App. 612, 619 [238 Pac. 1066].) If there were no other facts involved that assertion would be quite persuasive. But there are many other allegations. The plaintiffs alleged 1hat by the fraudulent representations of the defendant corporation they were induced to exchange securities, issued by the defendant corporation, for securities of State Capital Company, an agent of said defendant; that such exchange
Stating our views in a different form, these propositions are clearly presented by the record. The plaintiffs claim to be investors and entitled to recover as such. . They were entitled to plead an action to quiet title. That they have done and more too. In the supposed action to quiet title the defendants would have been entitled to plead the alleged exchange. As by replication the plaintiffs would have been entitled to prove the alleged fraud. Under such pleadings and proof they would have been entitled to relief. (Moore v. Copp, 119 Cal. 429 [51 Pac. 630]; Wetzstein v. Thomasson, 34 Cal. App. (2d) 554, 557 [93 Pac. (2d) 1028].) We may not say they should be precluded because they have pleaded too much.
It may be said the plaintiffs sued to recover damages. True, but their complaint was answered and they may be awarded such relief as comes wiiliin the issues. (Sec. 580, Code Civ. Proc.) If they establish their claim as alleged, the trial court may find they are still the owners of their original certificates and, if so, they will then be entitled to present them to the defendant commissioner and share in subsequent dividends as provided in Act 986, supra. Section 13.16, paragraph 3, contains this sentence: "Any investor, without presenting a claim, shall be entitled, as to any dividends hereafter declared, to share in such dividends to the extent, and in the proper relative order of priority, of any claim shown by the books of the association to exist in his favor against the association.” (Italics ours.)
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Nourse, P. J., concurred.
I dissent. The specific allegations contained in the pleadings were controlling. (Little v. Union Oil Co., 73 Cal. App. 612 [238 Pac. 1068] ; Aitken v. Stewart, 129 Cal. App. 38 [18 Pac. (2d) 988].) I believe that the specific allegations contained in the pleadings of both plaintiffs and the plaintiff in intervention showed that said parties had ceased to be “investors” in the association, within the meaning of section 13.16 of the Building and Loan Act, long before the take-over of the association by the commissioner in 1933. Under said section 13.16 they were required to present their claims within the time prescribed by said section or their causes of action, if any, were barred. This action for damages was not commenced until 1936. It was not alleged in any of the pleadings that any of these claimants had ever presented any claim. The parties stood upon their pleadings and stated that they did not intend to prove the presentation of any claim as provided in said section 13.16. I am therefore of the opinion that the trial court properly entered judgment on the pleadings in favor of the defendants; that it erred in granting a new trial; and that the order granting a new trial should be reversed.