65 P. 326 | Cal. | 1901
Plaintiff brought the action, by a verified complaint filed September 8, 1896, against Hanson Co., an alleged copartnership, for a balance due for labor performed for said copartnership, from June 1, 1890, until October 1, *93 1894, under a written contract alleged to have been entered into May 13, 1890, with said Hanson Co. The cause was tried by a jury, and plaintiff had the verdict, and judgment followed. Defendants appeal from the judgment, on bill of exceptions.
The third amended complaint was filed August 23, 1897, and an answer was filed October 27, 1897, denying the alleged copartnership and the alleged contract. The answer was verified by Charles Hanson. A separate defense was alleged, which need not be noticed.
Charles Hanson died March 21, 1898. There appears in the transcript an amendment to the answer, marked, "Filed in open court, September 16, 1898," reciting: "Now comes Charles Hanson, and by leave of court amends his answer, on file herein, by striking out subdivision 1 of said answer, and in lieu thereof inserting the following: (Subdivision 1 was a denial that there ever existed such copartnership.) Defendant alleges that the designation Hanson Company is the name under which Charles Hanson, during all the times mentioned in plaintiff's complaint, has transacted his business, and that said designation stands for, always has stood for, means, and always has meant, Charles Hanson, and no other person or persons, and the said Charles Hanson, responding to said designation and name, states that he is the person on whom a copy of the complaint and summons in this action was served, and that he makes answer thereto as and for the said Hanson Company; and he expressly denies that the said Hanson Company herein named as a defendant is or ever was a copartnership."
Plaintiff's counsel filed in open court a written waiver of verification of the proposed amendment, and waiver of notice of motion to file said amendment, adding: "but nothing herein contained shall be deemed or construed to be a consent upon the part of the plaintiff that said amendment may be allowed." No objection to this amendment, nor to the petition and order, next to be noticed, appears in the record, except as it may be inferred from the above, which we do not think can be construed to be an objection. On the same day, September 16th, defendants, Samuel G. Murphy and H.C. Cheseborough, executors of the last will of Charles Hanson, deceased, applied to the court to be substituted as defendants in the cause, alleging that Hanson died March, 21, 1898, and also alleging their appointment as executors, *94 and on the same day the court made an order that said executors "be, and they are hereby, substituted as defendants in the place and stead of Charles Hanson, sued as Hanson Co." There is in the record no order allowing the amendment to the answer above stated. But, as it recites that, it was filed by leave of court, and is found among the pleadings, and as the substitution of the executors made by order of court the same day appears to recognize the fact that the amendment was part of the pleading, we must assume that it was treated as a pleading in the case, notwithstanding it was filed after Hanson's death. Defendants, Murphy and Cheseborough, asked and obtained leave of court to file a supplemental answer to the amended complaint, in which they allege the death of Hanson and their appointment as executors. A demurrer to the proposed pleading was sustained. It is of no particular consequence that this supplemental answer cannot be considered, as it elsewhere appears that defendants were substituted on petition showing their appointment as executors, and the death of Hanson, and these facts were proved at the trial without objection. In this condition of the pleadings the cause went to trial.
To perfectly understand the question involved, it should perhaps be stated here that, upon the coming in of the verdict, plaintiff, to make it conform to the pleadings, caused it to be put in the following form: "F.O. Frazier v. S.G. Murphy and H.C. Cheseborough, as executors of the last will and testament of Charles Hanson, deceased, substituted herein as parties defendant for and in place of Hanson Co., defendants. We, the jury in the above-entitled cause, find a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against defendants," etc., and the court entered judgment on the verdict against the executors, "payable in due course of administration."
1. Defendants objected to further proceedings, and to the taking of evidence in support of the action, on the ground that no claim had been presented to or filed with the executors for the indebtedness sued upon. The court overruled the objection, and defendants excepted. At the close of the trial, defendants objected to the verdict, and moved to set it aside on the ground that "it now appears to be a verdict entered against the executors of the estate of Charles Hanson, deceased, whereas the evidence shows there never has been any claim presented to those executors in the matter sued upon." The motion was denied, and defendants excepted. The complaint *95
did not allege any presentation of the claim to the executors, and it was admitted at the trial that the claim sued upon had not been presented to them. Section
Unless the case is in some way relieved from the operation of the statute, it was error to proceed with the trial after the executors were substituted for the only answering defendant, and it was error to enter a judgment against the executors, in the absence of any proof that the claim had been presented to them. It was held in Derby Co. v. Jackman,
2. Respondent invokes the doctrine of estoppel, and in support of his contention claims that as Hanson Co., as a firm, dealt with plaintiff, neither plaintiff nor Hanson could dispute the firm relationship, and that the personal representatives of Hanson stand in no better position. (Citing Wise v. Williams,
We cannot see that either the rule or the reason of the rule in these cases has any application here. The pleadings on which the parties went to trial showed, and it was proved without objection, that Hanson Co. was only another name for Charles Hanson; that Hanson Co. and Charles Hanson were one and the same person. When the court ordered the substitution of the executors "in the place and stead of Charles Hanson, sued as Hanson Co.," they were not substituted as representatives of any partnership; the court could not make them representatives of a copartnership, and deal with them as such, for they represented only Charles Hanson, deceased. If the action was to proceed on the theory that a partnership existed, the survivors of the partnership alone could close its affairs, and they should have been brought in as defendants, and the executors not made parties at all; if it was not a partnership, but merely another designation for Charles Hanson, then it was necessary to substitute his executors after his death, and the court very properly — we suppose on this latter assumption — made the order. In this attitude the case narrowed itself to an action against the executors representing Charles Hanson, deceased, and not representing in any sense a partnership. It so resulted, for the verdict was against the executors, and the judgment was against them, with direction to pay the same in due course of administration. This was in direct violation of the statute, which required presentation of the claim before any judgment could be entered.
Section
Against the objection of defendants, that it was in violation of subdivision 3 of section 1880 of the Code of Civil Procedure, plaintiff was permitted to testify to what Charles Hanson said and did prior to, at the time of, and after plaintiff's engagement to work for Hanson Co., and after his work had ceased, as well as other facts occurring before the death of the deceased. The trial court held that plaintiff could testify to any facts occurring from the beginning of his employment to the close thereof, which would tend to establish an estoppel against the executors, now the defendants, and that upon the estoppel being shown to the satisfaction of the jury, the jury could then consider the plaintiff's testimony on the merits, regardless of the code provision which declares: "The following persons cannot be witnesses: . . . . 3. Parties or assignees of parties to an action or proceeding, or persons in whose behalf an action or proceeding is prosecuted, against an executor or administrator upon a claim or demand against the estate of a deceased person, as to any matter of fact occurring before the death of such deceased person." (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1880, subd. 3.)
The estoppel set up by plaintiff was, that plaintiff was induced by Charles Hanson to engage with Hanson Co., believing the latter to be a copartnership, and that neither Charles Hanson nor his representatives can now be heard to dispute the fact; that the claim sued upon was not against the estate, but was against the partnership, and hence this was not "an action pending against the decedent at the time of his death," and section 1880 of the Code of Civil Procedure does not apply.
If it was merely a question whether Hanson was a member of Hanson Co., and the plaintiff was seeking to reach the assets of the copartnership of which Hanson had led plaintiff to believe he was a member, Hanson might be estopped from denying the partnership. But that is not the situation here. Plaintiff is endeavoring to reach the property of Hanson's estate, in disregard of a positive statute requiring the presentation of the claim. Hanson may not have been entirely ingenuous when he first answered and denied the partnership without disclosing the real truth as to Hanson Co. But the truth was made manifest when it was answered, after his death, that he was Hanson Co., and his executors were substituted "for Charles Hanson, sued as Hanson
Co." Nothing then stood in the way but the presentation of the *98
claim to the executors, as, in Falkner v. Hendy,
We do not believe the doctrine of estoppel can be invoked where, to give it effect, there must be entire disregard of statute law. Sections 1500 and 1502 admit of no exceptions. Wisev. Williams,
To prove the estoppel, plaintiff was permitted to show the facts in the very way that the statute (sec. 1880) says may not be done, and this, in order to evade the other statute. (Code Civ. Proc., secs.
Haynes, C., and Cooper, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is reversed.
*99Henshaw, J., Temple, J., McFarland, J.