184 P. 523 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *133 Appeal from a judgment, entered after default, awarding damages in the sum of $17,688 for personal injuries.
Within the time when an appeal may be taken appellants filed with the clerk of the court in which the judgment was entered a notice stating the appeal from the same and served a similar notice on the attorneys for the adverse party. They did not, however, within five days after service of the notice of appeal, file the undertaking, or, in lieu thereof, make the deposit of money with the clerk as required by sections 940 and 941 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and no waiver of the same was ever made or filed. Neither did appellants, in lieu of preparing and settling a bill of exceptions, pursuant to the provisions of section 650 of the same code, file with the clerk the notice required by section 953a thereof, requesting that a transcript of the proceedings be made up and prepared.
On the contrary, appellants caused to be duly prepared and settled a bill of exceptions, containing the usual statement of the matters occurring at the trial. Respondent moves to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that no undertaking on appeal having been given or deposit in lieu thereof made, this court has no jurisdiction of the cause, for the reason that no appeal has been perfected in the manner or form prescribed by law.
The motion is without merit. [1] The new and alternative method of taking appeals provided by sections 941a, 941b, and 941c of the Code of Civil Procedure, enacted in 1907, dispenses with the necessity of an undertaking. (Estate of McPhee,
The motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.
The original complaint in this action was filed July 8, 1914, against the Pacific Coast Borax Company, then a corporation, incorporated for a period of fifty years from and after July 5, 1912. It was alleged that plaintiff had suffered severe personal injuries by reason of the negligence of defendant in failing on two separate occasions to furnish him a safe place in which to work. After obtaining time by stipulation within which to plead, on September 18, 1914, counsel, who later specially appeared in the action for appellants, filed a general and specific demurrer, purporting to be interposed on behalf of the Borax Company. At the hearing on demurrer the same counsel orally suggested to the trial court that the corporation defendant had ceased to exist, and moved for a dismissal of the action, which was denied. The demurrer was overruled and an answer was filed on April 26, 1915.
From the answer it appeared that on September 8, 1914, which date was prior to the appearance of the company in the action by proceedings duly taken to that end, the corporation had amended its articles by changing the term for which it was to exist from fifty years to two years, two months and seven days from and after the date of its incorporation. In other words, the life of the company had expired on September 12, 1914, six days before the demurrer purporting to be on its behalf was filed in this action. *135
After the service of notice thereof by plaintiff on the attorneys who first made the purported appearance in the action on behalf of the Borax Company, the court granted permission to plaintiff to file an amended and supplemental complaint, naming as defendants the appellants, who were alleged to be the directors of the Pacific Coast Borax Company prior to and at the time it ceased to exist as a corporation. The amended and supplemental complaint set forth the original causes of action, the facts relating to the termination of the life of the corporation, and that the directors thereof (appellants) had thereby become its trustees, with full power and authority to settle its affairs. The prayer of the amended and supplemental complaint was for recovery "of and from the said defendants" of the amount claimed as damages by reason of the personal injuries. The court ordered that the defendants named therein be given twenty days from the date of service of a copy of the order so fixing the time in which to plead.
No summons or any notice that the appellants so alleged to be directors of the Pacific Coast Borax Company prior to and at the time it ceased to exist had been made defendants in the action was served on the defendants, or either of them, or upon any attorney of record other than upon the attorneys who first appeared and filed the demurrer and thereafter the answer before referred to. Except in the same manner, no service was made of the court's order fixing the time within which defendants might plead to the amended and supplemental complaint.
The defendants not appearing, judgment by default was entered against them in the amount prayed for. Thereupon, the defendants specially appearing by counsel for the purpose, made a motion, supported by affidavits of merit and as to the facts, for an order setting aside the default judgment and all subsequent proceedings. The motion was based on the facts, substantially set forth herein, and the further fact that no one of the defendants was a director of the Borax Company at the time it ceased to exist. No counter-showing was made by the plaintiff. The court denied the motion and appellants have appealed from the judgment.
[3] A corporation is dissolved at the expiration of the term of its corporate existence (Kohl v. Lilienthal,
Respondent, nevertheless, contends that the lower court having acquired jurisdiction over the defendant and the subject matter of the action by reason of the service of summons, continued to entertain and hold such jurisdiction, regardless of the fact that subsequent to such jurisdiction attaching the corporation voluntarily ceased to exist, and that, while the directors might properly be substituted as parties defendant, such substitution was not essential to a continuance of the action. He cites three cases as supporting this proposition:Lowe et al. v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
As we read the cases relied on by respondent, they merely determine that, since the amendment of 1907 to the act in question, an action pending against a corporation which has forfeited its charter by reason of failure to pay its license *138
tax, shall not abate by reason of the forfeiture, but may be continued and prosecuted or defended in the corporate name, the control and management of the action, so far as the corporate interests are concerned, being in the directors or managers in office at the time of the forfeiture, they being the trustees of the corporation, its stockholders or members. (Brandon v. Umpqua Lumber Co., supra.) We find nothing in any of said decisions, read in connection with the statute under which the cases arose, which may properly be said to remove this case, and cases like it, from the operation of the well-established general principles so succinctly stated in the authorities from which we have quoted. [6] As was so well pointed out by the chief justice in the Crossman case, supra,
section 400 of the Civil Code, already quoted, does not have the effect of continuing the existence of a corporation after dissolution so as to render it capable of defending actions in its corporate name. It was, therefore, necessary that if the action could continue at all that its successors or representatives, under section 400, be properly brought in on motion, as provided in section
[7] Assuming the correctness of the recital in the judgment in this case, that the Pacific Coast Borax Company was regularly served with process, the filing of the demurrers and answer in its name and purporting to be in its behalf, was a nullity. So far as the dead corporation itself was concerned there could be no admission or estoppel. It could no longer be served with process, could not appear, could not itself admit anything nor authorize anyone else to do so for it. It was legally dead. (Crossman v. Vivienda Water Co., supra.) The action of counsel, who may have had authority to represent the defendant company prior to the termination of the period of its legal existence, could not, so far as that party was concerned, vitalize any proceedings taken in the abated action after the corporation ceased to exist. Any subsequent service on them by the plaintiff of the notice of motion to file the amended and supplemental complaint, the notice that such pleading had been filed, and of the time granted the substituted defendants within which to plead thereto, was not effectual, so far as any interest of the defunct corporation was concerned. (Deiter v.Kiser,
Unless, therefore, it can be shown that some other course was followed, the result of which was to properly bring the appellants into the action, after which, by due service or voluntary appearance, they were subjected to the jurisdiction of the court, the respondent will have failed to maintain his position here. [8] From the very nature of things the dissolution or death of the defendant, like the death of any other party to a pending action, could only be brought to the attention of the court on proper suggestion made by someone other than the defunct corporation itself. (Combes v. Keyes,
The notice of motion given by the plaintiff for permission to file the amended and supplemental complaint was based upon the notice itself and upon all the records, pleadings, and files in said action. The verified proposed amended and supplemental complaint was attached to, and by apt reference made a part of, the notice and motion. There was on file in the action the purported answer of the Borax Company, which was duly verified by one purporting to have been the secretary of the corporation prior to and at the time it ceased to legally exist. It fully appeared in both of these verified pleadings that the defendant corporation was legally dead. It was alleged in the verified proposed amended and supplemental complaint that "immediately prior and at the time of said dissolution" appellants, naming them, "were the duly elected, qualified, and acting board of directors of said corporation, and that they, as such directors are now the legally constituted and authorized trustees, representatives, and successors in interest of said corporation, and trustees of the creditors, stockholders, and members of said corporation, with full power and authority to settle the affairs of said dissolved corporation, and to appear in and defend this action, and as such are true and proper defendants herein." *140
This notice of motion was not served on any of the appellants personally. It was addressed to the defendant Borax Company and to the attorneys who had purported to represent it in the earlier proceedings in the action. It was served on these attorneys and on no one else. [9] It seems to be the well-settled rule that the substitution of one party for another by order of court is not such an amendment of a pleading as is required to be made on notice or to be engrossed otherwise than to be entered in the minutes of the court. (Kittle v. Bellegarde,
[10] No record appears in the transcript from which we may gather that a formal order was made and entered in the minutes of the court, either in substance or in haec verba,
substituting the appellants as parties defendant in the place and stead of the Borax Company. We are of the opinion, however, that the notice of motion and the order of the court directing that the proposed amended and supplemental complaint be filed and made of record in the case, and further directing that the defendants named in said amended and supplemental complaint have and were given twenty days from date of a service of a copy of this order in which to plead thereto, constituted a substantial compliance with section
[11] One substituted in a cause must be duly notified of the fact of his being made a party before he can be affected by notices or proceedings in the action. (Judson v. Love,
[12] It follows, therefore, that as there was no service upon, or authorized appearance by or in behalf of the defendants, the default entered in the action against the appellants was unauthorized, the judgment entered thereon was void and must be reversed. (Linott v. Rowland,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to the trial court to vacate and set aside the default of the defendants, with permission granted to them to plead to the amended and supplemental complaint, as in the original order therefor provided.
Richards, J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.