74 Cal. 151 | Cal. | 1887
Lead Opinion
This case was heard and decided by Department Two. On petition of defendants, a hearing in Bank was ordered.
For reasons given in the Department opinion, the judgment is affirmed.
The following is the opinion of Department Two, above referred to, rendered on the fourteenth day of March, 1887:—
The complaint in this case avers that the plaintiffs, L. A. Phillips and A. Phillips, were and are partners, doing business under the firm name of Phillips Brothers; that defendants, also partners in business, received from one Souza $729.22 in money to the use of plaintiffs, which they promised to remit to
The Code of Civil Procedure, after stating the various grounds upon which a defendant may demur to a complaint, among which is want of legal capacity to sue, and stating also that when any of the matters enumerated as a ground of demurrer does not appear on the face of the complaint, the objection may be taken by answer, provides as follows:—
“ Sec. 434. If no objection be taken either by demurrer or answer, the defendant must be deemed to have waived the same, excepting only the objection to the jurisdistion*154 of the court, and the objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”
■ As there is no objection here to the jurisdiction of the court, appellants’ contention must rest upon the objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. And this, in turn, rests upon the proposition that in a suit by partners doing business under a fictitious name there can be no sufficient statement of a cause of action without the statement that the certificate of partnership required by the Civil Code had been filed. But this latter proposition cannot be maintained. The only penalty attached by the code to a failure to file the certificate is the legal incapacity to maintain an action upon “ any contracts made or transactions had in their partnership name.” (Sec. 2468.) There is no disability imposed to mahe contracts or to have transactions. They may own property, whether it consists of goods, wares, and merchandise, or choses in action. When the property consists of a cause of action, it may be assigned to a person laboring under no incapacity to sue, who may bring and maintain an action thereon. (Cheney v. Newberry, 67 Cal. 126.) But that could not be if the cause of action did not exist before the assignment. The assignment could impart no new virtue to the thing itself, although it would place it in hands which could use it. The cause of action is as complete before as after the assignment,—just as a book is as complete in the hands of a man entirely illiterate as after it has passed to one who can read it. If, therefore, in a suit brought by partners, the complaint is perfect in all other respects, there is no failure to “ state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action,” merely because it contains no statement that a certificate of partnership had been filed. The objection which appellants here for the first time present is an objection to the legal capacity of plaintiffs to sue. But that objection must be taken by demurrer if the grounds for it appear
Appellants rely mainly on the case of Sweeney v. Stanford, 67 Cal. 635. But the point did not arise in that case. There the complaint averred that plaintiffs had filed the certificate of partnership; this averment was denied in the answer, and upon the issue thus made, plaintiffs having failed to show a substantial compliance with the statute, the court held that the lower court should have granted a nonsuit. Reference is made in the opinion to Byers v. Bourret, 64 Cal. 73, in which case the defendants in their answer averred that plaintiffs had not filed the certificate of partnership, and the court expressly called the averment a plea “ in the nature of a plea in abatement.” And it has never yet been decided in any case, that without the issue having been made in any way in the lower court, it could be successfully suggested here for the first time that plaintiffs had not filed a certificate of partnership. And while there may be language used in the opinion rendered in the case of Sweeney v. Stanford, not necessary to its decision, which is somewhat favorable to appellant’s views, the case decides nothing more than that when the issue of the filing of the certificate is made in the court below it becomes a vital issue to the plaintiffs. There is nothing, therefore, in that case, which precludes us from entertaining the views above expressed.
The only other point made by appellants, is that the evidence does not justify the findings. This point was not much pressed at the argument, and cannot be maintained.
Judgment and order affirmed.
Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment, on the ground that the failure to file the certificate required by section 2466 of the Civil Code was not set up by the answer. (Sweeney v. Stanford, 67 Cal. 635.) Such a defense must be specially pleaded, where, as in this case, there is no averment in the complaint in relation to the filing of the certificate. This is expressly ruled in the case above cited.