100 Cal. 429 | Cal. | 1893
The respondent, Christena Henke, brought this action to recover $600.
The complaint avers in substance that the defendant is a corporation, organized and having for its object the
Wherefore plaintiff asks judgment for $600 and costs of suit.
Defendant demurred to the complaint, upon the grounds:
1. That it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
2. That the complaint is ambiguous, in that it cannot .be determined whether plaintiff seeks to recover by virtue of the endowment certificate of February 8, 1889, or by virtue of the contract.
3. That it is unintelligible, in that it does not allege any consideration for the contract to pay plaintiff $600.
4. That the complaint is uncertain, because it cannot be determined therefrom:
(a) Whether there is any mutuality rendering the alleged promise binding;
(b) Whether plaintiff ever performed the, or any, act or acts on her part necessary to perfect a cause of action upon the contract;
(c) Whether, according to the maturity table of the constitution of defendant, a right of action upon the promise of defendant had accrued to plaintiff.
The demurrer was overruled by the court, and leave given defendant to answer.
The case comes up on the judgment-roll, and the only-question made is upon the propriety of the order of the court below in overruling the demurrer.
The first contention of appellant is that no consideration is alleged in the complaint for the execution by defendant of the agreement upon which a recovery is sought.
Section 1614 of the Civil Code provides that "A written instrument is presumptive evidence of a consideration.”
It is a familiar rule of pleading under our code system that every fact which a plaintiff will be called upon to prove at the trial must he averred in his complaint. It is equally a rule that presumptions of law should not, or at least need not, be stated.
When the plaintiff averred in her complaint that the defendant executed a contract in writing wherein it promised, at a given date, to pay her a certain sum of money she stated facts from which the law presumed a consideration, hence it was unnecessary to aver it specially.
A like presumption was indulged as to sealed instruments and negotiable paper long before the adoption of our code, and, as to such instruments and paper, no special averment of a consideration was necessary. (McCarty v. Beach, 10 Cal. 462; Wills v. Kempt, 17 Cal. 99.)
Counsel for appellant admit the force of section 1614 of the Civil Code, but contend that it only applies in those cases where the contract is set out hæc verba.
We do not so understand it. The practice of setting . out copies of papers upon which actions were founded in the declaration did not prevail at common law; the practice being to plead an instrument according to its legal effect. Chitty, in his work on Pleadings, declares it is not necessary to aver a consideration in those cases
Bliss, in his work on Code Pleadings, after stating the rule that a consideration should be averred except in cases where at common law the instrument, such as deeds and negotiable promissory notes, imported a consideration, proceeds to state the exception which prevails in those states where by statute a different rule has been established, and, after quoting section 1614 of our Civil Code, adds: “Thus the pleader is relieved of the necessity of averring consideration, leaving the want of it to be set up as a defense when authorized by statute." (Bliss on Code Pleadings, secs. 268, 269.)
The necessity of pleading a consideration for the contract is obviated by the fact that it is in writing, and not by the mode of pleading it. The cases of Douglass v. Davie, 2 McCord, 218, and Goddard v. Fulton, 21 Cal. 437, cited by appellant, are not in point.
It is quite apparent from the complaint that the cause of action is based upon the written contract to pay, and that the allegations of membership by plaintiff in the defendant corporation, issuing to her an endowment certificate, and her right as a member to participate in the endowment fund, etc., are but inducement to the contract upon which she counts, and does not render the complaint ambiguous, uncertain, or unintelligible.
That most, if not all, of this matter is redundant, and might have been stricken out as such under section 453 of the Code of Civil Procedure, is highly probable, but is not a cause for demurrer.
The other objections are without merit.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
Vanclief, C., and Haynes, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Garoutte, J., Paterson, J., Harrison, J.