139 P. 75 | Cal. | 1914
This is an appeal by plaintiff upon the judgment-roll from a judgment given in favor of defendant, upon sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff's complaint, without leave to amend. The action was one brought by plaintiff on his own behalf and as assignee of a number of claims held by various other persons, to recover against defendant on his liability as a stockholder of the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company, a corporation engaged in a banking business in the city of San Francisco prior to October 30, 1907, on which date it suspended business. The amount sought to be recovered was fifty thousand dollars. In the complaint was set out a schedule showing the various dates upon which the plaintiff and his assignors had made deposits with the Safe Deposit *240 and Trust Company, and it was alleged that these deposits were to be repaid on actual demand, with interest; and further that no demand had been made for the repayment of the same until the company ceased to do business. Nearly all of these deposits were made more than three years prior to the commencement of this action, the aggregate amount of such deposits made within such three years being so small that the proportionate stockholder's liability of defendant thereon would be less than three hundred dollars.
The principal ground of demurrer was that all the claims against defendant as a stockholder on account of deposits made more than three years prior to the commencement of the action were barred by the provisions of section
Learned counsel for plaintiff practically concede this. They however contend that the decisions referred to should be overruled.
It is urged that if section
Learned counsel for plaintiff presents a forceful argument in behalf of their claim that these decisions were erroneous, and insist that this court shall now re-examine the question, and, if convinced of the correctness of their claim, shall overrule such decisions. We are satisfied that the question should be held to be finally settled by this line of decisions, upon the doctrine of stare decisis. For more than twenty years the doctrine of Hunt
v. Ward,
The claim that section
In view of what we have said, the conclusion of the lower court upon this question was correct.
Another question is presented by this appeal, the correct determination of which, in our opinion, requires a reversal. The complaint showed certain of the deposits to have been made within three years prior to the commencement of this action. So far as the cause of action based on the deposit by Bella A. Locke of $1886.75 on October 25, 1907, at least, is concerned, the complaint stated a cause of action in such a way as not to be subject to any of the grounds of objection urged by the demurrer. In fact, learned counsel for defendant admits that in so far as the demurrer was a special demurrer, it did not purport to be applicable to this portion of the complaint. In the order sustaining the demurrer entered in the minutes it was declared that the demurrer was sustained without leave to amend solely on the ground that the deposits alleged in the complaint as having been made more than three years prior to the commencement of the action are barred by section
We think it is clear that the objection just specified was not good, and that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to thewhole complaint on account thereof, and in giving judgment that plaintiff take nothing by his action. Our constitution, in declaring the original jurisdiction of the superior court, provides that it shall have such jurisdiction "in all cases . . . in which the demand, exclusive of interest or the *244
value of the property in controversy amounts to three hundred dollars." It is thoroughly settled that the question whether the superior court has jurisdiction in an action at law is to be determined by the demand or prayer of the complaint, made in good faith and reasonably supported by the allegations on which it is founded, and that if this demand amounts to three hundred dollars, exclusive of interest, such court has jurisdiction of the case for all purposes, entirely regardless of the amount which the plaintiff may finally be held to be entitled to recover. (See Solomon v. Reese,
Referring, further, for the purpose of future proceedings, to the special demurrer interposed by defendant, we are satisfied that none of the grounds is well based, except possibly the claim of uncertainty made in paragraph V of the demurrer, applicable only to two out of thirty-one deposits, those of Knowlton Bill and Cassel Leonard, the alleged uncertainty being in the allegation as to the number of subscribed shares of the capital stock of the California Safe Deposit Trust Company at the time of such deposits. We are inclined to the opinion that the portions of the complaint referred to are open to the objection of uncertainty thus made.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Sloss, J., Shaw, J., Lorigan, J., Melvin, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.