5 Cal. App. 2d 95 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1935
This is an appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment entered upon failure of plaintiffs to further amend after demurrers to their amended complaint were sustained with leave to amend.
Plaintiffs, under the liberal provisions of section 378 of the Code of Civil Procedure as amended in 1927, joined as plaintiffs in this action and each separately cast her complaint in two separate counts or causes of action. For the purpose of this decision the two sets of causes may be deemed identical in form and substance, and but one set need be considered. The first and third causes allege that each defendant is a corporation authorized to transact business in California; that plaintiff is the holder of a stated number of shares of the preferred stock of Daley’s, Incorporated, represented by a numbered certificate and of a specified par value; that for a valuable consideration said certificate was issued and sold to plaintiff in accordance with the permit of the corporation commissioner of the state of California, a true copy of said certificate being attached to the complaint, marked exhibit “A” and made a part thereof; “that at the time of said purchase of said certificate by said plaintiff, said defendant Daley’s, Incorporated, agreed and promised to redeem or pay on December 31, 1931,
The second and fourth causes repeat the allegations of the first cause respecting the corporate character of defendants and the allegations last above recited respecting the Continental Chain Stores, Inc., and then allege “that in the same transaction and/or series of transactions in the sale of pre-' ferred stock of defendant Daley’s, Incorporated, said defendant received within the last year from date hereof, for the use and benefit of said plaintiff, the sum of” $3,000 in the case of Bates and $3,400 in the ease of Warner; “that both of said defendants agreed to repay said sum, but have wholly failed and refused so to do or to repay any part thereof, and each and all of said sums are now due, owing and wholly unpaid to this plaintiff”. Exhibit “A”, which is made a part of the complaint, purports to be a certificate for 120 shares of preferred capital stock, par value $25, issued January 16, 1929, by Daley’s, Incorporated, to plaintiff Bates, it being alleged that one in the same form for 136 shares was issued to plaintiff Warner. It certifies that 6,000 shares of the company capital stock shall be known as 8 per cent preferred stock, 34,000 shares as 8 per cent preferred stock—series A, and 40,000 shares as 7 per cent preferred stock—series A. As to the 6,000 shares of 8 per cent preferred stock, the following appears in the certificate: ‘ ‘ Said preferred stock shall be redeemable at par on December 31, 1931, provided the corporation has the option of redeeming the preferred stock, in whole or in part, at any time and
To this amended complaint defendant Continental Chain Stores, Inc., filed a separate demurrer on the general ground as to each of the causes of action stated and on special grounds as to the first and third causes of action. The special demurrer alleged uncertainty and ambiguity in that it could not be ascertained from the allegations of the complaint above quoted whether the promise to redeem or pay the certificate of stock was contained within the said certificate or was a promise collateral to said certificate; and in that it could not be ascertained from the allegations relating thereto whether the promise of Continental Chain Stores, Inc., to pay the indebtedness of Daley’s, Incorporated, was or was not in writing. In a separate demurrer, entitled “Demurrer of Continental Stores, Ltd., formerly Daley’s, Incorporated”, and reciting, “Now comes Continental Stores, Ltd., formerly known as Daley’s, Incorporated, and demurs”, the amended complaint is attacked as to all four causes of action, on the general ground, and as to the first and third causes on the special grounds of uncertainty and ambiguity in that it could not be ascertained from the allegations above quoted whether the promise to redeem or pay the certificate was contained in the said certificate or was collateral to said certificate. This demurrer was apparently recognized by the trial court as the demurrer of Daley’s, Incorporated, one of the defendants, and we are content to consider it as such, no point being raised herein to the contrary.
Prior to the amendment of sections 447 and 448 of the Code of Civil Procedure in 1929 it was the rule that where an agreement or contract was pleaded as the basis of a right or obligation on which the complaint or defense was founded, but it was not stated therein whether the agreement was in writing or was oral, it was presumed, as against demurrer, that the agreement was in writing. In 1929 there was added to section 447 the words “if the plaintiff relies upon a written instrument, in whole or in part, that fact shall be pleaded”. This provision was in force when this action was commenced, being stricken from the section in 1933. This amendment had the effect of reversing the former presumption. If after the section was amended the plaintiff failed to plead the fact that he relied on a written instrument as a basis of contract obligations in his cause of action, it was presumed that the contract was oral. The purpose of the amendment is clear. It was to compel exposure of the fact as to whether the agreement relied on as basis of relief was in writing or not, to the end that legal issues might be raised by demurrer where the statute of limitations or the statute of frauds and such like might be pleaded, rather than compelling a defendant to wait and plead the same in his answer or to object to offer of proof at the trial. By section 1624 of the Civil Code it is provided that contracts to answer for the debt of another are invalid unless in writing subscribed by the party to be charged or his agent. In each cause of action herein plaintiffs allege that defendant Continental Chain Stores, Inc.,
The separate demurrer of Daley’s, Incorporated, attacks all four causes on the general ground, and the first and third on the special ground of uncertainty and ambiguity in respect to whether the alleged promise to redeem and pay the certificate was contained in the certificate or was a collateral promise. We will take up the special demurrer first.
A written contract which is the foundation of a cause of action may be pleaded in haec verba rather than according to its legal effect, either by setting forth a copy in the body of the pleading or by attaching a copy as an exhibit and incorporating it by reference. To justify this mode of pleading, however, the instrument thus made a part of the complaint must show upon its face in direct terms, and not by implication, all the facts which the pleader would have to allege under the other mode. And if the instrument is not free from defect or ambiguity in those particulars, some definite construction must be put upon it by averment or the pleading will be subject to demurrer. (6 Cal. Jur. 478.) In the first and third causes herein plaintiff pleaded the certificate by attaching a copy. It appears clear enough to us, and we are confirmed in our belief by the argument pro and con in opposing briefs herein, that a defect or ambiguity exists on the face of the certificate in respect to whether the language used therein imported and consisted in a direct promise to redeem and pay the certificate on December 31, 1931, or only contained the essentials of an option so to do at the election of de
It is contended by respondent that such a promise or agreement is void under the provisions of section 309 of the Civil Code as it existed at the date of the certificate, wherein directors of corporations were forbidden to divide, withdraw or pay to stockholders or any of them any part of the capital stock of the corporation. By the term "capital stock”, as used in this section, is meant, not the shares of which the nominal capital is composed, but the actual capital, i. e., assets with which the corporation carries on its corporate business. (Schulte v. Boulevard Gardens Land Co., 164 Cal. 464, 468 [129 Pac. 582, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 1013, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 156].) In support of their contention respondents rely upon the cases of Vercoutere v. Golden State Land Co., 116 Cal. 410 [48 Pac. 375], and Ghilberg v. Gross Land Co., 55 Cal. App. 678 [204 Pac. 28], These cases, with many others decided on similar facts, uphold
In the complaint in the case at bar there is no allegation as to the status of corporate assets, and it is not alleged that there exist surplus profits exceeding corporate debts from which the redemption price of plaintiff’s stock could be paid without injury to any creditor or stockholder. This defect, respondents contend, is fatal to the sufficiency of the cause of action. On the other .hand, appellants contend that such matter is defensive in character and need not be pleaded by plaintiffs. As the right to enforce a contract of the nature of the one herein is limited by the provisions of section 309 of the Civil Code, and as the recognition by the court of the right to enforce a similar contract in the Schulte case was under an exception to the general rule and predicated on the affirmative showing in the complaint that the “capital stock” would not be depleted contrary to the provisions of that section, we are constrained to hold herein that the absence of similar allegations in the complaint in this case leaves the first and third causes of action incomplete in an essential particular, and that therefore the general demurrer was well taken and properly sustained.
The demurrers to the second and fourth causes of action were properly sustained. Counsel have characterized these causes as common counts for money had and received. They are not in the form of .such common count but are ordinary complaints in the form prescribed by the code. (Sec. 426, Code Civ. Proc.; Union Bank & Trust Co. v. County of Los Angeles, 2 Cal. App. (2d) 600 [38 Pac. (2d) 442].) Bach is founded on an allegation that “defendants agreed to repay said sums”, which entirely disassociates the cause of action from that embraced in the common count for money had and received. This latter form has developed and been grafted on our system of pleadings to enable re
The judgment is affirmed.
Stephens, P. J., and Grail, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on April 3, 1935.