DocketNumber: No. 19352
Citation Numbers: 104 Cal. 1, 37 P. 767, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 846
Judges: Belchek, Fleet, Gakotjtte, Haeeison, Seaels, Vanclief
Filed Date: 9/4/1894
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
As indicated by the title, the controversy here is solely between the alleged intervenors and two of the defendants in the action as originally commenced. The action, as originally commenced against Babcock, Story, San Diego Street Car Company et al., was of the nature of a creditor’s bill in equity to subject equitable assets of the street-car company (a corporation) to the satisfaction of a judgment against it in favor of the plaintiff. It was averred in the complaint that Babcock and Story and certain other defendants were the owners and holders of a large number of shares of stock of the street-car corporation, on which shares they had paid only fifty per cent of their par value, and that they were indebted to that corporation for the unpaid balance on their subscription for said stock. After the averment of other facts necessary
On July 2, 1890, no other creditors having come in, ’ or been made parties to the action, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff according to the prayer of his complaint; and, in addition to the judgment prayed for, and without any finding that there was any other creditor of the street-car company than the plaintiff, the judgment contains the following paragraph:
“It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that this cause be retained, and that any other judgment creditor of the defendant corporation, the San Diego Street Car Company, who shall make a proper showing to the court of his right thereto, be allowed to become a party to this suit, to establish his claim and have execution against said defendants for such sum found due such creditor not exceeding the uncollected balance of the amount herein found due from said defendants respectively to said corporation, provided that in no case shall any of said defendants be required to pay, nor shall execution issue against them for any greater sum than the amount found due from them to the said corporation as aforesaid.”
The defendants appealed from the judgment in the original action, and from an order denying their motion for new trial, and this court affirmed the judgment and order. (Baines v. Babcock, 95 Cal. 581; 29 Am. St. Rep. 158.) But no question relating to said last paragraph of
On September 12, 1892, being two years and two .months after the rendition of the above-mentioned judgment, and more than a month after that judgment was finally affirmed by this court, the respondents herein (West Coast Lumber Company and O. J. Fox) applied to the superior court for leave to file in that case what they denominated “their intervening and supplemental complaint/’ which was granted; and accordingly they filed it, and thereafter amended it. The introductory paragraph thereof is as follows:
“ Come now West Coast Lumber Company and C. J. Fox, for themselves and all other creditors of the defendant San Diego Street Car Company who may come in and be made parties to this action and contribute to the costs and expenses of the prosecution thereof, and they themselves coming in and joining with the plaintiff in the prosecution of this action, and offering to contribute to the costs and expenses thereof, and by way of coming in under the previous order of this court and judgment herein, by leave of court now file this, their amended complaint in intervention herein, and complain of the defendants and allege”:
Then follow allegations of facts constituting the inter-venors’ cause of action against the defendants in the original action, founded on judgments in their favor against the street-car company obtained about fifteen months after the rendition of the original judgment in favor of the • plaintiff, Baines. In addition to the facts constituting a cause of action against the defendants, Babcock and Story, the intervening complaint set forth all the proceedings in the original action, including the judgment therein in favor of the plaintiff, Baines, and also alleged that the judgment in favor of Baines had been fully satisfied.
The plaintiff, Baines, did not answer this so-called intervenors’ complaint, but the defendants, Babcock and
The court found for the alleged intervenors, and thereupon rendered judgment as follows:
“Now, therefore, by reason of said findings, and by reason of the law and the premises, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed as follows:
“That the West Coast Lumber Company is a judgment creditor of the San Diego Street-Car Company in the sum of $6,184.45, upon a judgment duly made and given by the superior court of the county of San Diego, state of California, on the fourteenth day of October, 1891, ifi an action therein pending, wherein the said West Coast Lumber Company was plaintiff and the San Diego Street Car Company was defendant.
“ That 0. J. Fox is a judgment creditor of said San Diego Street Car Company in the sum of $2,136.35, upon a judgment duly given and made by the superior court of the county of San Diego, state of California, on the twentieth day of November, 1891, in an action in said court pending, entitled C. J. Fox, plaintiff, v. The San Diego Street Car Company, defendant.
“ That each of said judgments remains wholly unpaid, together with interest thereon at the legal rate since the respective renditions thereof.
“ That each of said parties has properly come in and become parties to this action, and established their claims as provided in the decree hitherto entered herein on the second day of July, 1890.
“That the defendant, E. S. Babcock, Jr., has not paid the amount adjudged to be due from him to the said San Diego Street Car Company, or any part thereof, and*6 the said defendant is still indebted to said San Diego Street Car Company in the sum of $48,600.
“ That the defendant, H. L. Story, has not paid the amount adjudged to be due from him to said San Diego Street Car Company, or any part thereof, and the said defendant is still indebted to said San Diego Street Car Company in the sum of $21,275.
“ That the claim of W. E. Baines has been fully paid and satisfied.
“ That the said West Coast Lumber Company and C. J. Fox have and recover of and from the said defendants, Babcock and Story, the amount of their respective judgments with interest, but not to exceed the amount decreed to be due from said Babcock and said Story, respectively, to said San Diego Street Car Company.
“That said West Coast Lumber Company and C. J. Fox share pro rata, according to the amount of their respective claims, any sums recovered of either of said defendants.
“ That said intervenors have execution against said defendants for the amounts above decreed to be due them respectively.
“ Done in open court, this 1st day of June, 1893.
“W. L. Pierce, Judge.”
The defendants appealed from this judgment within sixty days from the entry thereof, upon the judgment-roll, including a bill of exceptions specifying alleged errors in law and fact.
1. Whether respondents had such “interest in the matter in litigation,” as would have entitled them to intervene in the original action “ before trial,” pursuant to section 887 of the Code of Civil Procedure, it is clear that they did not so intervene; and it is quite as clear that under that section they had no right to intervene two years after the trial (Laugenour v. Shanklin, 57 Cal. 70; Carey v. Brown, 58 Cal. 180; Owens v. Colgan, 97 Cal. 454); nor do respondents contend that they had. But they contend that the original action was com
In the first place, the original complaint does not purport to have been made for the benefit of any class of persons who had any interest in any question involved in the action, though it does purport to»be on behalf of all creditors of the street-car company who may come in and be made parties to the action and contribute to the costs, etc. But mere creditors were not of the class to which the plaintiff belonged, nor within any exception which entitled them to the same or similar remedies. Only judgment creditors who had exhausted their remedies at law were of plaintiff's class. Upon the facts stated in the complaint mere creditors were entitled to no relief whatever. Though the complaint was sufficient to warrant the relief sought by the original plaintiff, as held in Baines v. Babcock, 95 Cal. 581, 29 Am. St. Rep. 158, it was not sufficient to entitle others on whose behalf it purported to be made even to come in as parties to the action. (Carey v. Brown, 58 Oal. 181; Pomeroy’s Code Remedies, 890.) So far as the respondents were concerned, the averment that plaintiff sued on behalf of other creditors w.as of no consequence, and in relation to plaintiff’s cause of action it was merely redundant surplusage. If respondents were entitled to become parties to that action at all, the only mode by which they could have been made parties was by intervention before trial, under section 387 of the Code of Civil Procedure, of which, as above shown, they did not avail themselves. Besides, the so-called “amended complaint in intervention” shows that neither of the .respondents became a judgment creditor of the streetcar company until October, 1891, fifteen months after the rendition of the judgment in the original action; and, therefore, until that date neither of them was entitled to become a party to the action either under
2. Respondents contend, however, that they came in as parties under the order of the court appended to the original judgment, to the effect that the “ cause be retained, and that any other judgment creditor . . . . who shall make a proper showing .... be allowed to become a party,” etc. But there was nothing in the pleadings upon which to rest this order, except the aforesaid redundant surplusage in the complaint upon which nothing in the judgment, other than surplusage, could have been founded. But even if it be conceded that the order is valid, it refers only to persons who were judgment creditors at the time it was made; and not to those who may have become such fifteen months or fifteen years thereafter. (For additional authorities under this head, see Pomeroy on Code Remedies, 3d ed., 388-400.)
3. Although the respondents never became parties to the original action, I think their so-called “ complaint in intervention” may be regarded and treated as an independent original complaint, and as such is sufficient, notwithstanding the redundant matter relating to the action of Baines v. Babcock, 95 Cal. 582, 29 Am. St. Rep. 158, which does not vitiate the complaint if otherwise good. (Wickersham v. Crittenden, 93 Cal. 33; Carey v. Brown, 58 Cal. 180.) Without this redundant matter the complaint states a cause of action similar to that stated in Baines v. Babcock, 95 Cal. 582, 29 Am. St. Rep. 158, which was held sufficient by this court.
But the complaint was demurred to on the ground of misjoinder of parties plaintiff, and appellants contend that the demurrer should have been sustained on this ground. But I think there is no misjoinder. (Owen v. Frink, 24 Cal. 171; People v. Morrill, 26 Cal. 360; Pomeroy’s Code Remedies, 3d ed., 267, and notes.)
4. Upon the issues as to whether the defendants were indebted to the San Diego Car Company, and as to whether that company had refused or neglected to. levy
“That only fifty per cent of the par value of the shares of the capital stock of the San Diego Street Car Company, alleged in said complaint to be held and owned by said defendants Babcock and Story, respectively, have been paid.
“That said defendants, respectively, agreed to pay the remaining fifty per cent alleged to be due upon said shares. That there is due and unpaid from the defendant Story upon his subscription to said capital stock the sum of $21,275; that there is due and unpaid from the defendant Babcock upon his subscription to said capital stock the sum of $48,600; that the San Diego Street Car Company has neglected and refused to make or levy any assessment upon any share or shares of its capital stock held by said defendants, or either of them.”
The appellant contends that neither of these findings is justified by the evidence; and I think this point should be sustained.
The only evidence claimed to have any tendency to support either of these findings is the judgment-roll in the case of Baines v. Babcock, 95 Cal. 582, 29 Am. St. Rep. 158, to which, as we have seen, neither of the respondents here was a party. This judgment-roll was admitted in evidence against the objection of defendants on the grounds that it was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial. I think it was incompetent and immaterial, and surely it had no tendency to prove that either of the defendants was indebted to the street-car company when respondents’ complaint was filed, two years after the entry of the judgment in favor of Baines.
Even as between defendants and Baines, that judgment only proved that defendants were indebted to the street-car company, and that the street-car company had failed to levy an assessment up to the time of the rendition thereof in favor of Baines; and it cannot be presumed that defendants did not pay their overdue debts to the street-car company, nor that the street-car com
Upon the facts of this case it is not necessary to decide whether or not section 382 of the Code of Civil Procedure was intended to authorize the practice of courts of equity, to its full extent, in permitting one plaintiff to sue on behalf of others, since even that practice does not permit the coming in of additional parties plaintiff after judgment in favor of the original plaintiff, who were not qualified to come in before such judgment.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.