This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment entered against it upon its failure to answer after the overruling of a demurrer which it had interposed to the plaintiff’s complaint. The question is therefore as to the sufficiency of the complaint.
The complaint alleged in brief that the plaintiff was the owner of a one thousand dollar bond issued by the defendant, a public irrigation district, and that the bond had been lost, and prayed for a decree directing the issuance to the plaintiff of a new bond, and the cancellation of.the one lost. The prayer and certain of the allegations of the complaint make it certain that the plaintiff had in mind to proceed under section 329 of the Civil' Code. That section provides that “whenever a bond ... of a corporation . . . has . . . been lost or destroyed in this state by fire, earthquake, or other calamity, the owner thereof may bring an action against such corporation . . . for the purpose of obtaining a new or duplicate bond. ...” The principal ground of demurrer to the complaint was that it alleged merely that the bond had been lost or destroyed, and not that it had been lost or destroyed in this state, or in any calamity such as a fire or earthquake.
But it does not follow that the complaint was open to demurrer as failing to show a case wherein the plaintiff was entitled to relief. The code section does not purport to prescribe the only case in which a lost or destroyed instrument may be restored, or to prescribe the procedure which alone caff be followed to obtain such restoration. It provides merely that in certain cases a certain procedure may be followed for that purpose. The restoration of lost instruments is an old and well-established function of courts of equity, and it is likewise well established that their jurisdiction in this respect is not impaired by the passage of statutes providing for special proceedings for the same purpose, unless the intent to make such special proceedings exclusive appears. (25 Cyc. 1609.) Such intent does not appear in the statutes of this state.
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This conclusion, however, does not entirely dispose of the matter.
“Wherefore, by reason of the premises, the court does hereby order, adjudge and decree that in substitution for that certain one thousand'dollar gold bond with attached coupons, specified in the complaint herein, and issued by the defendant herein, Anderson-Cottonwood Irrigation District, and evidencing an obligation of the defendant for the payment of a principal sum of one thousand dollars, with the interest to accrue thereon, the said defendant do execute and issue to Ada I. Brown, the plaintiff herein, a duplicate bond of like tenor and import, together with duplicate coupons attached of like tenor and import, upon the plaintiff paying to the defendant all costs incurred by the latter in the premises, the same being hereby taxed at-dollars, together with the expenses of the execution and issue of said duplicate bond and coupons, and upon the plaintiff executing unto the defendant an indemnity bond in the sum of two thousand dollars, in form and with sureties approved by the court, indemnifying defendant against any loss or liability which may be suffered by it by reason of the execution and issuance of said duplicate bond and coupons distinct from and in addition to the liability of defendant heretofore evidenced by the bond and coupons for which such duplicate bond and coupons are to be executed and issued in substitution.”
As so modified, the judgment is affirmed, each party to bear its own costs on appeal.
Shaw, J., Wilbur, J., Lennon, J., Lawlor, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
