In this action against certain stockholders upon their statutory liability, plaintiff seeks to recover from each his or her proportionate share of an alleged indebtedness contracted by the Tefft Motor Car Company, a California corporation. Judgment went for plaintiff and defendant Ida J..Fisk appeals.
The evidence discloses the following: On July 15, 1915, plaintiff and the corporation entered into a written contract—evidenced by the former’s written offer and the latter’s written acceptance—whereby plaintiff agreed to purchase of the corporation a certain automobile for $7,500. *119 The contract provided that the automobile was to conform to certain written specifications indorsed thereon. Plaintiff, at the date of the contract, advanced $750 on account of the purchase price. The balance was to be paid when the car should be received by the corporation at its garage in San Diego. On March 11, 1916, the corporation delivered an automobile to plaintiff, which, after an inspection, he, on March 13, 1916, redelivered upon the ground that it did not comply with the agreed specifications. About two weeks thereafter, namely, on March 29, 1916, the corporation having failed to deliver to him a car conforming to the requirements of the contract, plaintiff demanded a return oí the $750 that he had deposited as part payment on the purchase price. The corporation having refused to return his deposit to him, plaintiff brought an action against it in the superior court for San Diego County to recover said sum of $750. On September 20, 1918, he recovered judgment in that action for the amount sued for, together with interest thereon at the legal rate, and $28.75 as costs. Ever since January 7, 1915, appellant has been the owner of 985 shares of the corporation’s capital stock. At that date, and at all times since, the total of the subscribed capital stock has been 1,000 shares.
Appellant contends that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The complaint, as amended, after alleging facts showing that, at all times since January 7, 1915, the total subscribed capital stock of the Tefft Motor Car Company has been 1,000 shares, and that appellant, during all of that time, has owned 985 shares, avers: “That on the twenty-ninth day of March, 1916, the said corporation became indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $750 in consideration of said sum of money theretofore deposited by plaintiff with said corporation to apply on the purchase price of a certain Locomobile car which said corporation contracted with plaintiff to build for him and to deliver to him not later than March 13, 1916. That said corporation failed and neglected to deliver a car such as was called for by such contract by March 13, 1916, or at any time; and that on the twenty-ninth day of March, 1916, the plaintiff rescinded said contract of purchase and made demand upon said corporation for repayment of said sum of $750, but that neither said corporation nor anyone has repaid any part of said sum to plaintiff, and that the *120 same with interest from March 20, 1916, remains entirely unpaid. That on the twentieth day of September, 1918, the plaintiff recovered judgment against said corporation upon said cause of action . . . for the said sum of $750 and interest to the date of said judgment in the sum of $879.75 debt and $28.75 costs, total, $908.50-; and that the same remains entirely unpaid. ’ ’
The gist of appellant’s objection to the complaint is that it does not state a cause of action upon the original indebtedness, but that, instead, it attempts to state a cause of action upon the judgment against the corporation.
It is contended that appellant’s statutory liability as a stockholder attached as of the date of the execution of the contract of sale, July 15, 1915. And since this action was not commenced until January 3, 1919, or more than three years after the execution of the contract, it is claimed that any cause of action against appellant is barred by the statute of limitations—section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
If it were true that the liability here sought to be enforced accrued upon the execution of the contract of sale, then unquestionably respondent’s cause of action would be barred.
Appellant assigns as error the action of the trial court in permitting respondent to put in evidence, over appellant’s objection, the judgment-roll in the action against the corporation. Unless that judgment, in so far as it adjudges that the plaintiff there, the respondent here, recover costs from the corporation, constitutes, as to such costs, an original, separate, and independent liability of the corporation, for which its stockholders are likewise primarily liable on their statutory liability—a question presently to be considered—there, is grave doubt as to its admissibility to prove any liability on appellant’s part as a stockholder.
We think that respondent is entitled to recover from appellant her proportionate share of the costs that were taxed against the corporation.. It is true that, in so far as appellant’s liability for her proportionate share of the
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original indebtedness of $750 is concerned, the action against her is not based upon the judgment against the corporation but upon her original and primary obligation to pay her proportionate share of that original indebtedness. But, when respondent recovered his judgment against the corporation, a new liability for a wholly separate and distinct sum of money accrued against the then existing stockholders, namely, a liability for the costs for which the corporation, upon the recovery of the judgment against it and not before, became liable as upon a new and original obligation.
(Fleeson
v.
Savage Silver Min. Co., 3
Nev. 157, 161, 162.) As said by the supreme court of Michigan in
Grand Rapids Sav. Bank
v.
Warren,
What we already have said disposes of every legal principle involved in this appeal, and, therefore, no other as-, signment of error requires analysis or discussion.
The trial court is directed to modify the judgment to conform to the views expressed herein, i. e., to so modify the judgment that appellant will not he charged with compound interest. As so amended the judgment is affirmed, with costs of this appeal taxed against appellant.
Works, J., and Craig, J., concurred.
