38 Cal. 528 | Cal. | 1869
Lead Opinion
This cause was tried by the Court, without a jury, on the 24th of October, 1868; and on the 7th of November following, the Court filed its findings in writing, stating the facts found and conclusions of law separately, as required by the Practice Act, and concluding with a direction to enter judgment for the defendant in pursuance of the findings. The plaintiff having given the defendant notice on the 10th of November of the filing of said findings, on the 14th of November the defendant gave plaintiff notice that he excepted to the findings on the ground that they were not in accordance with the evidence introduced, and served therewith other and different findings, which he claimed to be in accordance with the evidence, and a notice that on the 21st of November he would move the Court to substitute the findings so served for those on file. On hearing the motion, the Court made the substitution, with some slight modification, to all of which the plaintiff excepted, and he now relies on this action of the Court as one of the grounds for reversing the judgment and order denying a new trial. The change, however, was in some minor particulars, and the conclusion of law and judgment are the same as they were upon the finding first filed.
We know of no provision of the Practice Act authorizing the Court to re-examine the evidence upon the motion of one of the parties, after it has once filed its findings and rendered judgment, and on such re-examination to reverse its former action and substitute different findings of fact. Under the Act of 1861, and Section 180 of the Practice Act, as amended
If the Judge should discover a clerical mistake in his findings, or that he had inadvertently committed an error, and should correct it at the same term, before the entry of judgment, while the proceeding is still in fieri, and in such a manner that the party against whom the correction is made shall not thereafter lose an opportunity to move for a new trial, or have the time within which to move in any way abridged, or lose any other right thereby, we, doubtless, should not grant a new trial on that ground. But the practice of entertaining a motion to review the action of the Court in the mode pursued in this instance, if adopted, would be liable to abuse. It is nowhere recognized by the Practice Act, and ought not to be encouraged. A much better practice would be to submit the finding for the suggestions of the attorneys of the respective party, before signing and filing. (Tewksbury v. Magraff, 33 Cal. 237, 255.)
A release under seal of one of several joint, or joint and several debtors or obligors, is a release as to all. (Armstrong v. Hayward, 6 Cal. 185-6; Rowley v. Stoddard, 7 John. 210;
Both defendant, Lynch, to' the extent of his personal liability as a stockholder of the corporation, and the corporation, the Gobernadora Silver Mining Company, were jointly and severally liable to McClelland and Atkinson for their respective debts due from the corporation to them. If not jointly liable in the strict sense of that term, as has been suggested, the legal incidents, as between the corporation and stockholders, to the extent of their personal liability, are, it seems to Us, precisely the same. The stockholder is not a surety in any sense of the term. He is Under the Constitution and the statute primarily liable in the same sense as the corporation is primarily liable. The same identical act which casts the liability on the corporation, also casts it on the stockholder. There are not separate contracts. The Stockholder does not stand, in the position of an endorser or guarantor. An endorser or guarantor is not liable on the same contract. His contract is a separate and distinct one of his own, to which the principal is no party. It is founded upon the principal contract, and finds its consideration only in that-contract; but it is a separate and distinct contract, nevertheless, and the terms are different. Each is liable on his own particular contract, but there is no joint contract or joint obligation. The maker and endorser or guarantor of a note' may be sued jointly, it is true, but this does not result from the fact that there is a single joint contract.
It is suggested that the reason the release of one joint obligor discharges the other, is, that if either pays the debt the other is liable to contribution, which would be defeated by the release if it were permitted to exonerate only the party to whom it is made. On this ground it is said to be held to extinguish the debt. How this incident attends, the' relation in question, and this principle is as applicable to it as to the case of two joint makers of a note.
Suppose the corporation is sued and a recovery had : the
We think, however, that the Court was right in regarding the amount thus released as a payment by the defendant of other liabilities of the corporation with which he is entitled to be credited under Section 16 of the Act under which the corporation was organized. The release was to defendant, and it operated as a satisfaction of so much of the indebtedness "of the corporation procured by defendant. It is quite manifest that McClelland intended that defendant, not the corporation, should have the benefit of the release. If he chose to make a gift of this sum to the defendant, he had a right to do so; and, upon the gift being made, the amount became the property of defendant, and not of the corporation or other creditors of the corporation, and operated as a satisfaction by defendant. Defendant stands precisely in the same position as he would if McClelland had made him a
We do not see that there is any necessity for a new trial. The only issue upon the pleadings, is, as to the amount of the indebtedness of the corporation upon which defendant is personally liable. Upon this point both findings substantially agree as to the facts upon which the question is to be determined. The rest is mere matter of calculation, when the legal principles arising upon the facts are settled. Upon the pleadings, and both findings, the amount of the debts of the corporation, for a portion of which defendant is liable, on the 26th of April, 1867, was $4,418; and the amount to be credited as a payment on the debts of the corporation is the share of the defendant of the debt of $416 66 to McClelland, and $207 to Atkinson, released. The proportions and interest are mere matters of calculation. *
The judgment is reversed and the District Court directed to compute the amount and enter judgment upon the pleadings and undisputed findings, in pursuance of the principles stated in this opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
After the findings were filed in this case, the defendant, on notice to the plaintiff, moved the Court to set them aside
In this case, there is no substantial difference between the two series of findings on any material point, and it is not perceived that the plaintiff has been prejudiced by the action of the Court in this respect.
The releases from McClelland and Atkinson to the defendant, were evidently intended by the parties as-a release’ only of his individual liability as a stockholder for the debts due from the corporation to these creditors. Théy purport on their face, only to release him from “his proportion” of the company’s indebtedness to them, and these instruments cannot be construed as a transfer to the defendant of the indebtedness of the corporation to McClelland and Atkinson.
But the important question in the case is, whether the releases from McClelland and Atkinson to the defendant, of
In general, the release under seal of one joint, or joint and several debtors, will discharge the whole. (Armstrong v. Hayward, 6 Cal. 185; Rowley v. Stoddard, 7 John. 210; Cheatham v. Ward, 1 Bos. & Pul. 633; American Bank v. Doolittle, 14 Pick. 126; Tuckerman v. Newhall, 17 Mass. 583; Goodnow v. Smith, 18 Pick. 415.)
The release extinguishes the debt. (McCrea v. Purmort, 16 Wend. 474.) The reason assigned for the rule is, that as between joint debtors, there is a liability for contribution; and if either pays the debt, he is entitled to demand from his co-obligor his just proportion of it, and this right of contribution would be defeated by the release. Hence it is held that if a creditor release one of the joint obligors ho releases the whole, and extinguishes the obligation. But this principle has no application to the release of sureties or guarantors. The holder of a promissory note may release tho endorser or guarantor without impairing the obligations of the maker. Ho may maintain a joint or several action against them, and if he releases the maker he releases the sureties; because the corpus of the obligation is extinguished, and the debt being cancelled, the sureties are of course discharged. But the release of the surety does not discharge the principal, for the reason that, as between themselves, it
I conclude, therefore, that as between themselves, the corporation is the principal debtor, and the stockholders are but sureties or guarantors; and though both are primarily
It results from this view of the law, that a release to a stockholder of his individual liability for his proportion of a debt due to a particular creditor does nót pro tanto discharge the corporation, and hence, the release from McClelland and Atkinson to the defendant, in my opinion, did not extinguish any portion of the indebtedness of the corporation ; and, therefore, the defendant was not entitled to any deduction from the amount-due from him to the plaintiff. The releases were not relevant or competent evidence, as they proved nothing material to the defense. I express no opinion on the point whether a release of one or more stockholders from their individual liability, releases pro tanto the other stockholders from their liability, as such. But, for the reasons above stated, I dissent from the opinion of a majority of the Court.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent.