132 P. 283 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1913
Action in assumpsit to recover upon statutory stockholders' liability. Judgment went for plaintiff, from which defendants appeal.
In 1909, plaintiff, and others for whom he sued as assignee, indorsed and guaranteed payment of certain promissory notes made by the Provident Midway Oil Company, a corporation, for money borrowed by it. The corporation made default in payment of these notes; whereupon the holder brought suit thereon, including plaintiff and his co-guarantors as defendants therein; and on February 1, 1911, recovered judgment thereon against all of the defendants, which judgment plaintiff and his said assignors paid on July 20, 1911. At the time of the rendition of the judgment and up to and after the payment thereof on July 20, 1911, defendants were stockholders of the corporation, but they were not stockholders in 1909, at the time when the corporation executed the notes so indorsed and guaranteed by plaintiff and his assignors for the indebtedness then incurred. *529
The sole question presented is whether or not defendants as stockholders of the corporation were liable to the plaintiff and his assignors for any part of the judgment so paid by them. This identical question was before the court in Yule v. Bishop,
This appeal is prosecuted under section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure, known as the alternative plan, which relieves the appellant from filing any transcript of the record. Section 953c provides that, "in filing briefs on said appeal the parties must, however, print in their briefs, or in a supplement appended thereto such portions of the record as they desire to call to the attention of the court." In their brief appellants refer to the alleged fact that the Provident Midway Oil Company was at some time adjudged to be a bankrupt. Our attention is not called in the briefs to any evidence, or reference thereto, given upon this subject, and the court must not be expected to search through a voluminous record in an effort to discover the existence of evidence touching the question. Moreover, no issue as to such adjudication is presented in the pleadings and no finding made thereon. While, for the reasons given, we do not feel called upon to discuss the effect of such alleged adjudication, nevertheless, we are of opinion that, under section 4-B of the Bankruptcy Act, such fact would not avail defendants in this case.
The judgment is affirmed.
Allen, P. J., and James, J., concurred.