Artana v. San Jose Scavenger Co.
This text of 185 P. 850 (Artana v. San Jose Scavenger Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal given in favor of the San Jose Scavenger Company, a copartnership, upon sustaining a demurrer to a complaint.
The action was brought against the copartnership alone as a legal entity, under the provisions of section 388 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that “when two or more persons, associated in any business, transact such business under a common name, whether it comprises the names of such persons' or not, the associates may be sued by such common name, the summons in such eases being served on one or more of the associates.” Coneededly the *629 provisions of this section authorize an action against a co-partnership by its common name, the section recognizing the copartnership as a distinct legal entity for the purposes thereof. The action was one to have the interest of the plaintiff, claimed to have been acquired by purchase at an execution sale of the interest of one of the partners in the copartnership, ascertained, and for an accounting. The record does not show how summons was served on the partnership defendant, or, indeed, that it was ever served on any of the partners. However, a demurrer was interposed to the complaint by ope Peter Devincenzi, who was not named in the complaint, describing himself as “sued as San Jose Scavenger Company, a copartnership.” This demurrer purported to be the demurrer of said Devincenzi alone, as an individual, and did not purport to be the demurrer of the defendant partnership. Plaintiff thereupon made a motion for an order striking such demurrer from the files on the ground that Devincenzi is “a stranger to the action and not a party thereto and upon the further ground that the said demurrer is sham.” This motion was denied. The demurrer was thereafter sustained and judgment given “that plaintiff take nothing by his said complaint,” and “that the said action be dismissed.” This is the judgment appealed from.
It seems improper, in the absence of competent objection to the' complaint, to discuss the claims made in the brief of respondent relative to its insufficiency as a pleading. We may say, however, that it appears to us that plaintiff may have a good cause of action against an existing co-partnership known as the San Jose Scavenger Company, if such there be, or against Devincenzi, doing business under that name, on the theory that such copartnership, as it now exists under that name, or Devincenzi, is holding property belonging to him, a person not a member of the partnership, for which it refuses to account. If he did succeed in purchasing, at-execution sale, the interest of one of the partners in the former San Jose Scavenger Company, such purchase dissolved the partnership (Civ. Code, subd. 4, sec. 2450), leaving him with his action against the remaining partner or partners to obtain his interest; but it is possible that a new partnership has been created under that name, of which he is not a member, which is withholding his property.
It is possible that Devincenzi was a member of such a copartnership, served with summons in this action, and authorized to appear for and in its name, and that the demurrer was inadvertently filed by him as an individual. *631 In that event, we think the lower court should allow him to file an amended demurrer in the name of the copartnership.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Olney, J., Wilbur, J., Lennon, J., Lawlor, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
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185 P. 850, 181 Cal. 627, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/artana-v-san-jose-scavenger-co-cal-1919.