Bartholmae Oil Corp. v. Booth

28 P.2d 1083, 146 Or. 154, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 34
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 P.2d 1083 (Bartholmae Oil Corp. v. Booth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartholmae Oil Corp. v. Booth, 28 P.2d 1083, 146 Or. 154, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 34 (Or. 1933).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

Defendant was the owner of one-twentieth of the capital stock of the Oregon Oil and Development Company, hereinafter referred to as the Oregon company, an Oregon organized corporation with authority to engage in all phases of the oil busi *156 ness in any state of the United States. Plaintiff is a California corporation. On August 24, 1923, plaintiff and W. E. McDonald entered into a contract whereby plaintiff agreed to drill an oil well on certain real •estate in Los Angeles county, California, for which said W. E. McDonald agreed to pay plaintiff the sum of $110,000. This contract was later modified but .such modifications are not material to the determination of the case in this court.

On December 23, 1923, said W. E. McDonald, with the consent of plaintiff, assigned all his right, title and interest in said contract to the Oregon company who assumed and agreed to all of the obligations of the assignor.

Plaintiff alleges performance of the contract during the year 1924 and that, by reason thereof, there is a balance due it of $62,978.79 for the payment of which, under the constitution and laws of the state of California as they existed at the time said indebtedness accrued and which were pleaded by plaintiff, defendant is liable for one-twentieth of that amount.

The trial court refused plaintiff permission to file a supplemental complaint it offered for filing, wherein it alleged that since the filing of the amended complaint herein the Superior Court of California for Los Angeles county had entered a judgment in favor of plaintiff herein and against the Oregon company in the same amount and arising out of the same contract and state of facts as in the instant case, and that said judgment was affirmed by the appellate courts of California. It further alleged that the judgment against the corporation was “by the law of California prima facie proof in an action against a stockholder of the liability of the corporation so adjudged”.

*157 Defendant filed an answer in which he admitted the organization of the Oregon company, its authority to engage in the oil business in the state of California and all the other states and territories of the United States. He admits that the law of California was as set out at length in the amended complaint but alleges that the article of the constitution of California, providing for such liability for the stockholders of a corporation, was repealed at a general election November 4, 1930, and that the statute of California covering the same subject was repealed by the legislature of California, April 20, 1931, but admitted that said repealing act carried the provision: “That the repeal of said section should not impair or affect any remedy or cause of action or any liability incurred or accrued under said section prior to the time the repealing act took effect.” He further alleged that by the repeal of the said constitutional provision the alleged right of action of plaintiff herein was destroyed. The answer admitted the contract between McDonald and plaintiff and the assumption of the same by the Oregon company and attached a copy of the original contract to the answer as an original exhibit. Defendant also pleads “that long prior to the commencement of the action, plaintiff was fully paid all sums due and owing by reason of any and all the matters and things alleged in the complaint”.

Plaintiff’s reply admits that the constitution of California was amended November 4, 1930, by doing away with the stockholder’s liability in a corporation so far as his liability is concerned in a case where the liability arpse or matured after such repeal. It also denied the plea of payment.

Upon the trial of the cause, plaintiff put in evidence its articles of incorporation and the articles of incor *158 poration of the Oregon company, which specifically mentions California and Texas as states in which it is authorized to do business, and then offered a certified transcript of the judgment roll in the California action referred to in the proposed supplemental complaint. Upon objection by defendant, the judgment roll was rejected on the grounds that it was incompetent and irrelevant. Plaintiff then offered the report of the opinion of the California Supreme Court in the case of Ellsworth v. Bradford, 186 Cal. 317 (199 P. 335), to show that such a judgment is evidence against a stockholder in an independent suit on his separate liability in the state of California. This also was rejected on objection by defendant. Plaintiff then offered the report of the opinion of the California District Court of Appeals in the case of Bartholomae Oil Corp. v. Oregon Oil and Development Company, 106 Cal. App. 57 (288 P. 814), which also was rejected. Plaintiff thereupon made the formal proof of all the foregoing, and rested its case. Thereupon defendant moved for a non-suit which was granted. Plaintiff appeals, assigning as error the ruling of the trial court:

“1. In denying plaintiff leave to file its Supplemental Complaint;
2. In excluding from evidence the judgment roll in the case of Bartholomae Oil Corporation v. Oregon Oil and Development Company;
3. In excluding from evidence the report of the case of Ellsworth v. Bradford;
4. In excluding from evidence the report of Bartholomae Oil Corporation v. Oregon Oil & Development Company in the Appellate Court;
5. In granting defendant’s motion for non-suit.”

All the above assignments of error really rest on the question of whether it was error on the part of the *159 court to refuse to admit in evidence the judgment roll in the case of Bartholomae Oil Corporation v. Oregon Oil and Development Company. If the court was right in this respect, the other assignments of error would be immaterial. No objection was taken to the offer of the above items of evidence on the ground of lack of authentication or certification.

Plaintiff claims that the refusal to receive the judgment roll in evidence was a violation of section 1, article 4 of the United States Constitution, usually referred to as the full faith and credit clause of the constitution. The judgment roll offered shows a judgment in favor of the plaintiff herein against defendant Oregon Oil and Development Company, the company in which defendant herein was a stockholder at the time the alleged breach of the contract on which the judgment in the judgment roll is based.

At the time the debt accrued, section 3, of Article 12 of the Constitution of California, provided in part as follows:

“Each stockholder of a corporation, or joint stock association, shall be individually and personally liable for such proportion of all its debts and liabilities contracted or incurred, during the time he was a stockholder, as the amount of stock or shares owned by him bears to the whole of the subscribed capital stock or shares of the corporation or association.”

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Bluebook (online)
28 P.2d 1083, 146 Or. 154, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartholmae-oil-corp-v-booth-or-1933.