This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal following an order granting a motion to strike plaintiff’s third amended complaint.
Plaintiff filed an action for declaratory relief and accounting on January 21, 1957. Thereafter he filed three verified amended complaints. In substance, they alleged that under an oral agreement entered into in May of 1954, defendants em
Appellant urges reversal of the judgment on the ground that the trial court abused its discretion in granting the motion to strike the third amended complaint and in ordering a dismissal of the action.
A review of the record discloses numerous changes in essential averments in the amended pleadings, none of which were ever explained or accounted for by the pleader. These unexplained changes constitute omissions, variations and contradictions in material allegations relating to the services 1 required to be performed by plaintiff under the oral agreement, the termination date thereof and the time of defendants’ repudiation.
Eeferring first to the services plaintiff was required to perform, the original complaint alleged that all services under the agreement were to be paid for by defendants—in the first amended complaint, all were to be performed voluntarily without compensation—and in the second and third amended complaints, only his services in securing personnel and material were to be paid for. More specifically, in his original complaint, plaintiff was to “solicit, procure and obtain personnel and material” for a series of travelog shows and “to conduct, supervise, prepare and produce the publicity and advertising of such travelog shows,” for which “such services” he was to receive $50 per week. In the first amended complaint, plaintiff alleged that under the oral agreement his services of ‘ ‘ conducting, supervision, preparation and production of publicity and advertising of and for said travelog shows, was agreed by said parties to be entirely voluntary upon the part of the plaintiff,” for which he was not to be
In a similarly ambiguous and contradictory state we find plaintiff’s allegations relating to the time of defendants’ repudiation of the agreement. In both the original and first amended complaints, plaintiff alleged that since May, 1954, immediately after the agreement was entered into, defendants refused to recognize plaintiff as the solicitor of personnel and material and as the producer of advertising and publicity under the agreement; and since May, 1954, refused to deal further with him. Plaintiff in his second and third amended complaints presented an entirely new version of when the repudiation took place, completely omitting any reference to prior allegations that defendants repudiated the agreement since May, 1954, and alleged for the first time that from May, 1954, to October, 1955, plaintiff performed certain services under the agreement and “That thereafter plaintiff demanded his compensation pursuant to said agreement, but the defendants refused to meet such demands.” (Emphasis added.)
These variations and omissions are most serious because of the application of the statute of limitations. Plaintiff in his original complaint and first amended complaint swears that defendants repudiated the agreement since May, 1954, immediately after it was entered into; and in his second and third amended complaints, without any explanation therefor, he advanced the date of repudiation to October, 1955, a year and five months later. It is immediately obvious that, if plaintiff is to be bound by the allegations of fact in his prior verified complaints, if he had a cause of action for breach of the oral agreement, it was barred by the two-year statute of limitations when the original complaint was filed on January 21, 1957.
Equally serious are plaintiff’s changes in various allegations relating to the termination date of the agreement. In
Throughout these various pleadings, numerous material facts alleged under oath have been withdrawn from consideration, entire allegations have been omitted, and variations and
In permitting a third amendment, the court required that the complaint contain a substantial amendment. The result was the addition of that portion beginning “In other words,” which was only a reiteration and repetition of the facts set out in the allegations in the second amended complaint previously questioned. No attempt was made in the third amended complaint to state new facts or to explain any variations. It was no more clear and free from defects, ambiguities and uncertainties than the prior complaints to which demurrers had been sustained, and no substantial amendment having been effected by the plaintiff, the court granted the motion to strike.
A consideration of the second and third amended complaints in the light of the statute of frauds, the statute of limitations and authorities relating to rules of pleading applicable to declaratory relief and accounting actions, leads us to the conclusion that plaintiff has failed to state a cause of action. At the outset, the alleged oral agreement by its terms was not to be performed within a year from the making thereof and is invalid and barred by the statute of frauds. (Civ. Code,§ 1624, subd. 1; Code Civ. Proc., § 1973, subd. 1.) The Supreme Court, in the case of
Swift
v.
Swift,
In the case at bar the oral agreement made in May, 1954, was for services in connection with a television series “to be produced” and no definite time for performance was alleged. Plaintiff, however, alleged that since May, 1954, defendants have been and are now producing the series in question. Since it is clear from the pleadings that payment was to continue so long as the program was broadcast throughout the world, the parties must have contemplated that the continued performance of the contract was to last more than one year from the date of making, as indeed it did. Appellants rely upon part performance to take the oral agreement out of the statute of frauds. According to the allegations in the original and first amended complaints, if plaintiff partly performed it was after defendants repudiated the contract in May, 1954, immediately after the agreement was entered into.
Although entitled, ‘1 Complaint for Declaratory Judgment and for an Accounting,” the action is really one to recover an amount due for breach of the terms of an oral agreement. The nature of the right sued upon and not the form of the action, nor the relief demanded, determines the applicability of the statute of limitations.
(Maguire
v.
Hibernia S. & L. Soc.,
Appellant seeks refuge in the four-year statute of limitations applicable to actions for accounting and for declaratory relief. No real cause of action for accounting appears in any of the pleadings. Plaintiff alleged that under the oral agreement, defendants were to pay him a fixed salary of $50 per week, commencing June 1, 1954, to continue as long as the series is exhibited anywhere in the world. Plaintiff prayed for an accounting for all monies to which he is entitled under the agreement; for a judgment in the sum of $7,900 for compensation due under the contract from June 1, 1954, to the date the complaint was filed; and for a further judgment in the sum of $50 per week thereafter for as long as defendants receive compensation for the showing of the series.
Appellant relies heavily on the cases of
Brea
v.
McGlashan,
The question as to how long plaintiff is to receive the $50 per week in the future does not in any way affect the amount plaintiff alleges is now due under the contract. Moreover, we fail to see how the court will be able to determine in advance how long a particular television series will run. The future of any television show, no matter how popular at the moment, is an unknown quantity in any calculation as attested to by many of our prominent ex-television personalities.
As to declaratory relief, we think that no good cause of action therefor remains. Until some conventional right of action has accrued, the statute of limitations does not operate independently to cut off the right to bring one for declaratory relief, and after a “coercive” right of action has accrued the alternative right to bring an action for the declaratory remedy continues concurrently with the “coercive” right of action.
But
after the “coercive” remedy is barred by the statute of limitations, a declaratory relief action may not be utilized to circumvent the purpose of the statute.
(Martin
v.
Henderson,
In an attempt to state a good cause of action, plaintiff has drafted four different complaints to which either demurrers were sustained or motions to strike granted.. In examining all of the pleadings, we find numerous inconsist
It was unquestionably proper for the trial court herein to sustain the demurrer to the second amended complaint with leave to amend. There is manifest in this record no abuse of the trial judge’s discretion in granting the motion to strike the third amended complaint and the judgment of dismissal.
The judgment is affirmed.
White, P. J,, and Fourt, J., concurred.
