Action to enforce the liability of the defendant Commercial and Savings Bank and others as stockholders in the Shasta Lumber Company. All the defendants, except appellant, paid their proportionate shares of the debt before the trial, and as to them the action was dismissed. Defendants pleaded the statute of limitations. Plaintiff had judgment, from which and from an order denying motion for new trial this appeal is prosecuted.
Appellant states in its brief that the only question arising on the appeal involves its plea of the statute of limitations, except a question, also raised, as to the liability to pay interest. The questions presented all revolve around a certain agreement in writing alleged by plaintiff to be a waiver of the statute of limitations. A fair summary, together with a verbatim copy of certain parts of this agreement, is as follows: “This agreement, made this twenty-seventh day of January, A. D. 1896, by the undersigned with Wells, Fargo & Co., a banking corporation, having an office in the city and county of San Francisco, state of California, witnesseth”; recites that the undersigned were, on January 30, 1893, stockholders in the Shasta Lumber Company in the number of shares stated; recites the indebtedness of the lumber company to plaintiff on that day; recites a still further indebtedness contracted April 21, 1893, and still other indebtedness at later dates in that year not necessary to state here: “Whereas, said Wells, Fargo & Co. are about to commence suit against the undersigned to recover the pro rata amount due from each of them to said company on account of said indebtedness as stockholder of said Shasta Lumber Company, and the undersigned desire to delay such suit; now, therefore, to the end that said Wells, Fargo & Co. do refrain, for six months from date hereof, from instituting suit against the undersigned on *671 account of their liability as stockholders in said Shasta Lumber Company, for the indebtedness hereinbefore stated, the under-, signed, and each of us, promise and agree with said Wells, Fargo & Co., in consideration that it will forbear the enforcement of the collection of said sums by suit against us for said period of six months from date, that in the event of any action being commenced thereafter to recover our proportionate shares of such indebtedness, we and each of us will not plead the statute of limitations to such action. Witness our hands the day and year aforesaid.” Then follow the signatures of several stockholders, defendants, and number of shares of each stated opposite each name, and immediately thereafter the document continues as follows:
“The Commercial and Savings Bank does not admit that it is a stockholder in said Shasta Lumber Company, but simply held the stock as collateral security. It waives the statute of limitations as to any stock that may be proved to belong to said bank.
“THE COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS BANK, San Jose,
“By B. D. MURPHY,
“President.
“An extension of six months is granted pursuant to the foregoing agreement. HOMER S. KING,
‘Manager Wells, Fargo & Co.”
The complaint was filed March 27, 1897, fourteen months after the agreement was made. The oldest liability accrued January 30, 1893, and the agreement was made January 27, 1896, three days before the statute would have barred the remedy. It is admitted that appellant was a stockholder as alleged in the complaint.
Appellant relies upon the bar of section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and claims that the agreement in question is not such a one as to take the case out of the operation of the statute and as is referred to in section 360 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It is further claimed that the defendant bank did not sign the agreement; that it is without consideration, and whether it be considered as executed by appellant or not, it indefinitely suspends a right to plead the statute, and is therefore void, because contrary .to public policy. Some other points are *672 made by appellant, but they depend upon the foregoing; for example, that a mere waiver to plead the statute is not a waiver under all circumstances that may afterward arise, and that the agreement does not operate as an estoppel.
1. Did appellant execute the agreement? The evidence tended to show that Murphy, who signed for appellant, was the president and manager of appellant at the time, and had been for many years previously; that during this time the entire management of the bank was left to Murphy and to the vice-president, Findlay, in the president’s absence; and that the directors had allowed them to act upon their own judgment and as they thought best for the interests of the bank, and that it was not customary to report their actions to the directors, nor to ask ratification thereof, nor to first obtain special authority before performing particular acts relating to general business; and that this had been the course of business permitted by the directors since 1889; that the acts of the president had never been questioned by the directors; in short, the evidence tended to show that Murphy, as president and manager, had be'en allowed to do pretty much as he pleased in managing the affairs of the bank. There was a by-law of the bank reading as follows: “The manager shall be the general agent of the corporation and of the board of directors, and, as such agent, shall have a general supervision of the business of the corporation.....He shall have power to cancel all mortgages or other instruments under seal, taken as security for indebtedness due the bank, and perform all other duties which the interests of the corporation may require, limited only by the by-laws and the express instructions of the board of directors.” The evidence w-as that both Murphy and Findlay thought the agreement was in the best interest of the bank, but that the directors were never called upon to authorize or ratify it, nor does it appear that they knew of its execution. The evidence justified the finding of the court that the agreement was entered into by appellant.
(McKiernan v. Lenzen,
2.
Appellant contends that the agreement was without consideration, citing
Shapley v. Abbott,
3. Was the agreement such as can be said to be opposed to public policy? Judge Story said, in
Vidal v. Girard,
'This court sustained an agreement entered into between the nephews and the testator in her lifetime not to contest her will
(In re Garcelon,
It was said in
State Trust Co. v. Sheldon,
'The supreme court of the United States regarded such an agreement as operating by way of estoppel
in pais
to a defense
*675
under the statute of limitations.
(Randon v.
Toby,
4. Appellant is liable for interest. Section 322 of the Civil Code makes the stockholders liable for their proportion of the debt of the corporation. Interest was as much a part of the debt as the principal of the notes, which constituted most of the indebtedness
(Knowles v. Sandercock,
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
Haynes, C., and Britt, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order are affirmed.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Dyke, J.
