This appeal is from a judgment in defendant’s favor in an action brought against him to en *8 force contribution as a co-guarantor with plaintiff and others of three certain promissory notes.
The defense urged in the answer and at the trial, and insisted upon here, is that the statute of limitations has barred the action.
The case was heard by the district court of appeal (first district, division one), and the judgment of the lower court affirm'ed. Thereafter the cause was transferred to this court, and the judgment again affirmed. The judgment here, and likewise the judgment of the district court of appeal, was grounded upon the assumption, the record failing to show the date of the filing of the original complaint, that the action was commenced January 28, 1918, the date upon which the amended complaint was filed. The appellant, upon discovering this omission, sought a diminution of the record, and to that end produced and filed here a certified copy of the original complaint, at the same time moving, which motion was granted, for an order vacating the said judgment of this court. The record, as thus corrected, establishes, which is a controlling circumstance, that the date of filing the original complaint was December 13, 1917. The following are the material facts of the controversy, the statement of which, with some changes and additions, is taken from the opinion of the district court of appeal:
On September 17, 1913, at San Francisco, California, the Madera Realty Company, a corporation, executed its three certain promissory notes, each for five thousand dollars, and payable as follows: One on or before December 15, 1913, and the remaining two on or before January 15, 1914. Each of said notes was- indorsed and its payment guaranteed by the plaintiff, defendant, and several others. Payments were made' on account of the note due December 15, 1913, but no payment was made upon the other two. After their maturity, the Navilla Investment Company; a corporation organized under the laws of this state, and hereinafter called the company, took an assignment of the notes from the holders thereof, the note first maturing being assigned on April 1, 1914, and the others on January 17, 1914. At all the times embraced in the period covering the transactions material to the inquiry plaintiff was the owner of all the outstanding shares of the capital stock of the company, some of which, though standing upon its books *9 in the names of others, were in fact held in trust for plaintiff. Plaintiff was at all times in control of and dictated the management and affairs of the company and advanced it the moneys which it paid for said notes when they were assigned to it, the company having theretofore acquired all of the assets of plaintiff, who at that time and at all times mentioned in the pleadings was making use of the company for the purpose of conducting his business for his own personal convenience. The company purchased the notes for the reason that the then holder of them was pressing plaintiff for payment as an indorser. On November 17, 1917, plaintiff paid the company the full amount then due upon the notes, not in cash, but by the company charging the account of the plaintiff with such amount, his account at that time showing a credit balance in his favor in excess of the amount then due and unpaid on the notes.
The trial court found the foregoing facts, and also made a finding that plaintiff’s cause of action was barred by the provisions of subdivision 1 of section 339 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which was the only provision of the statute of limitations set up in the answer, and rendered judgment accordingly in favor of defendant. It is from this judg ment that this appeal is prosecuted.
Defendant contends that the foregoing facts establish that the company and plaintiff were not separate entities, but one and identical, and that, in legal effect, when the company took assignments of the notes, it amounted to payment by plaintiff, that such payment extinguished them for all purposes, and forthwith set the statute of limitations in motion against any claim or right he might have against defendant for contribution, and that the “only cause of action which accrued to plaintiff against the defendant was upon assumpsit, which the law implies, arising where one of two or more joint obligors is compelled to pay more than his share of the obligation, and therefore the plaintiff’s cause of action was barred absolutely two years after he so took up the notes and had the same assigned to his company.”
We cannot concede the correctness o"f defendant’s contentions.
As said in
Colonial Trust Co.
v.
Montello Brick Works,
To the same effect is the following language of Circuit Judge Lurton in
Richmond & I. Construction Co.
v.
Richmond N., I. & B. R. Co.,
Again, in
Home Fire Ins. Co.
v.
Barber,
There is no occasion for the application of this rule of unity in the present case. The facts do not warrant, much less demand, it. There is no finding, neither is there any evidence, to the effect that the organization of the company by plaintiff and the transfer to it by him of all his property were in any manner fraudulent or prompted by dishonesty, or that the company, in purchasing the notes, which, as we have seen, were indorsed by both plaintiff and defendant, committed or intended to commit any fraud whatsoever. It is true that plaintiff personally advanced *11 the money with which the company purchased the notes, but such advancement was entirely consistent with honesty and fair dealing, and bears no earmarks other than those of an open, legitimate transaction. It liquidated the obligation so far as the then owners of the notes were concerned, and in no respect whatsoever wronged or prejudiced the defendant, who was an indorser upon each of the notes, and upon failure of the maker to discharge them, became responsible for the payment thereof.
The finding of the trial court that the company acquired • the notes because the then holder of them was pressing plaintiff in his capacity as indorser for payment does not negative the separate entity of the company. In the absence of any dishonest motive or intention to accomplish a wrong, and, as we have said, none was proven, we fail to discover any objection whatever to plaintiff directing the company to purchase the notes. If it be assumed that he caused their purchase for the reason that it was not then convenient for him to meet his obligations as indorser, there would still be wanting the elements to which we have referred, and the presence of which we hold is essential to justify treating plaintiff and the company as identical—as a unit.
There is abundant authority in addition to the cases we have mentioned, sustaining our view of the law. Indeed, our attention has not been directed to a case holding the contrary. While some text-books contain passages pointing to a different conclusion, an examination of the cases
*12
cited by the author demonstrates that they not only do not support the text, but are predicated upon a version of the law similar to the one herein declared. Likewise, some of the decisions contain passages which, when taken alone, lend some basis for a different interpretation, but, when read in the light of the facts of the case, which is always essential when construing and applying judicial expressions, it is clear there was present the demand that corporate entity be ignored in order that fraud or some kindred wrong be defeated. All of the eases, so far as we are advised, in our own and other jurisdictions, which involved the abolition of corporate entity and the facts which warrant it, such as
Kelly
v.
Ning Yung Ben. Assn., 2
Cal. App. 460, [
Llewellyn Iron Works
v.
Abbott Kinney Co.,
Counsel for respondent direct our attention to a number of decisions of this court, which they earnestly maintain support their contention that the assignments of the notes on the 17th of January and the 1st of April, 1914, to the company was in reality absolute payment, and accomplished their extinguishment, but we think each of such cases is clearly distinguishable from the one we are considering, and that none of them is controlling here.
The court found, and there is a similar finding, except as to dates, as to each of the notes, ‘ ‘ That on the seventeenth day of January, 1914, the Navilla Investment Company
*14
purchased said note.” Under the facts appearing, we hold it was an absolute,
tona fide
purchase by the company acting in its separate entity, and by reason thereof, as was its intention, it became, in its distinct capacity, the owner and holder of the notes.
(Frank
v.
Brady,
Having determined that the company and the plaintiff were separate entities, it follows that section 1473 of the Civil Code, which declares that “full performance of an obligation, by the party whose duty it is to perform it, or by any other person on his behalf, and with his assent, if accepted by the creditor, extinguishes it,” is not applicable, for the reason that, as we have said, the transaction was a purchase and not payment of the notes by the company, and that there was no evidence of an intention upon the part of the company, or of the assignor and holder, to extinguish them. As previously stated, there was no “duty” resting upon the company to pay the notes; neither was the act of the company a payment on behalf of the plaintiff and with his assent, one or the other of which conditions is essential to bring the transaction within the provisions of the section. (Civ. Code, sec. 1473.) There was manifest here a definite design on the part of the company to keep the notes alive and hold them as its property, all of which, we declare, did not or could not prejudice the defendant and was not to his disadvantage
While the court found that the payment of the notes by the plaintiff on November 17, 1917, was not made by him as indorser, we think such finding was error and that there is no substantial evidence supporting it. In fact, the record establishes the contrary. The finding is predicated upon the theory, which we declare to be untenable, that the company and plaintiff were identical.
From what precedes, it follows that when, on November 17, 1917, plaintiff paid the notes to the company, which was then the sole owner of them, the effect was to vest in him the right to compel contribution from the defendant, his coindorser, for his proportion of the amount so paid, which he is endeavoring to do in this action, and the same, having been commenced December 13, 1917, was in time. (Code Civ. Proc, sec. 339.)
Judgment reversed.
Shaw, J., Sloane, J., and Wilbur, J., concurred.
