Alpha Hardware & Supply Co. v. Ruby Mines Co.

275 P. 984, 97 Cal. App. 508, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 34
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 13, 1929
DocketDocket No. 3673.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 275 P. 984 (Alpha Hardware & Supply Co. v. Ruby Mines Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alpha Hardware & Supply Co. v. Ruby Mines Co., 275 P. 984, 97 Cal. App. 508, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 34 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

JAMISON, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by defendants Gilman, Pike, Kerr, Hamilton, Hutchinson, Millar, De Vaux, Mitchell, Breed, and Thornton from a judgment canceling and annulling a deed of trust executed by defendant Ruby Mines Company to appellants Breed and Thornton as trustees for the benefit of appellant Hutchinson and declaring that the liens of the judgments theretofore rendered against said company and in favor of respondent and its assignors are superior to the claims of appellants under said deed of trust and debarring and restraining appellants from asserting any claim whatsoever, arising from said deed of trust to the mining claims in controversy, or any part thereof adverse to the defendant Ruby Mines Company, or *511 adverse to the judgment liens of respondent and its said assignors.

The facts of this case are very fully set forth in the opinion rendered by Presiding Justice Finch in the Matter of the Application of C. E. Gilman and L. E. Kerr, Petitioners, v. Superior Court, 86 Cal. App. 259 [260 Pac. 922]. We, therefore, deem it unnecessary to restate them here.

Appellants urge on this appeal that their demurrer to the amended complaint should have been sustained upon the grounds that the said complaint did not state a cause of action and upon the further ground that the action involved title, right of possession to and enforcement of liens upon real estate situated in Sierra County, while the action was brought in Nevada County. The complaint consisted of six counts, five of which were for the enforcement of stockholders’ liability against certain of the defendants and those five counts are not involved in this appeal.

The sixth count alleges that the Ruby Mines Company is indebted to respondent in the sum of $4,838.19 on account of said judgments of respondent and its assignors. That the said company owns certain mining property in Sierra County and that appellants Gilman, Pike, Kerr, Hamilton, and defendant Vahrenkamp are and were the directors of said company; that said company was never at any time indebted to any of the defendants, but that the said directors for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding respondent and respondent’s assignors and creating an unlawful preference or gift to Hutchinson, at a meeting of said directors fraudulently and in violation of their trusts and duties as such directors and without any valuable consideration therefor being paid to said company, caused to be executed, on behalf of said company, the note and deed of trust in favor of Hutchinson involved in this action; that said company is, and was at the time said note and deed of trust was executed as aforesaid, insolvent.

Section 3439 of the Civil Code provides that every transfer of property, or charge thereon, made with intent to delay or defraud any creditor of his demand is void against creditors of the debtor; and section 3442 of said code provides that a voluntary transfer or encumbrance of property by a party while insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency is fraudulent and void as to existing creditors.

*512 We are of the opinion that the sixth count of the complaint states a cause of action.

As to appellants’ objection that this action should have been brought in Sierra County, we are of the opinion that the real purpose and object of the action, as set forth in the sixth count of the complaint, was to set aside and cancel the note and deed of trust which, as is alleged in said count, was executed for the purpose of defrauding respondent and its assignors, who were creditors of the said Ruby Mines Company. The provision of the constitution requiring actions for the enforcement of liens upon real estate to be commenced in the county where the real estate is situated does not apply to an action in the nature of a creditor’s bill, brought to set aside a conveyance made by an execution debtor on the ground of fraud. (Beach v. Hogdon, 66 Cal. 187 [5 Pac. 77]; Woodbury v. Nevada etc. Ry. Co., 120 Cal. 463 [52 Pac. 730].)

Appellants contend that the amended complaint upon which this action was tried was insufficient to constitute a cause of action, or in reality was not a complaint at all, because of the manner in which it was drawn, in this that in the amended complaint instead of the pleader setting out the six paragraphs in full contained in said count six, as same appeared in the original complaint, he merely set forth the following: “That paragraphs I to VI, both paragraphs inclusive, in the sixth cause of action, set forth in the original complaint, are hereby referred to and made a part hereof as fully for all purposes as if set forth at length herein.” While we are far from approving this abbreviated method of pleading, yet in view of the fact that appellants answered said amended complaint and in detail denied practically every allegation contained in the said sixth count thereof, and the case was tried just as though each of the said paragraphs contained in the sixth count of the original complaint was set out in detail in the amended complaint, we do not feel that this alleged error would require a reversal of this case. The rule that a defective complaint may be aided by averments contained in the answer is thus set forth in volume 21, California Jurisprudence, 278: “Although the complaint is fatally defective, the necessary issue having been tendered by the answer and tried, a judgment will not be reversed merely for *513 the purpose of allowing an issue to be tendered by the plaintiff upon matter that has already been practically put in issue at the instance of the defendant and been determined.”

When a pleading is defective on account of an insufficient statement of material facts, rather than on account of a statement of insufficient facts, the defect in such pleading may be cured by the filing of a controverting pleading which clearly and unequivocally places in issue the material facts which have not before been put in issue on account of the insufficient statement of the former pleading. (Moody v. Pacific Surety Co., 41 Cal. App. 287 [182 Pac. 802].)

Appellants next contend that certain findings of the trial court to the effect that the execution of the note and deed of trust to appellant Hutchinson was done for the purpose of defrauding respondent, a creditor of said company, and to hinder and delay him in the collection of his debt, are not supported by the evidence. It appears that one E. L. Case was the owner of mining claims situated in Sierra County and that he had given defendant Vahrenkamp an option to purchase them-; that for the purchase, operation and development of said mining claims Vahrenkamp needed financial assistance; that appellants Kerr, Millar and Gilman advanced to him, at various times, sums aggregating $40,000; that thereupon Vahrenkamp executed a writing to them wherein he agreed, as a consideration for said loans, to give to them an option for five years for a fifty per cent interest in said claims. That Vahrenkamp having exercised his option, and with the money advanced him by Kerr, Millar and Gilman, having purchased the mining claims from Case, it was agreed that a corporation known as the Ruby Mines Company should be formed to take over the said mining claims.

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275 P. 984, 97 Cal. App. 508, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alpha-hardware-supply-co-v-ruby-mines-co-calctapp-1929.