Berringer v. Krueger

232 P. 467, 69 Cal. App. 711, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 245
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 2745.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 232 P. 467 (Berringer v. Krueger) 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
Berringer v. Krueger, 232 P. 467, 69 Cal. App. 711, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 245 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HART, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover from the defendant the sum of $859.56, an alleged balance due the plaintiff for work and labor performed by him for the defendant.

The answer consisted merely of specific denials of the allegations of the complaint, which is in the usual or ordinary form for the recovery of wages or debt for wages.

Judgment was awarded plaintiff for the sum of $705.66. This appeal is by the defendant from said judgment.

*713 There is no contention in the briefs that the plaintiff is not entitled to the compensation for which he sues. The defendant’s contention is that the obligation sued on was that of a partnership of which he was a member and not his individual obligation, and that, although the answer does not plead- a defect of parties defendant, the case was, nevertheless, tried upon the part of the defendant upon the theory that the debt constituted a partnership obligation; that upon that theory the evidence does not support the finding that the contract of employment was made with the plaintiff by the defendant as an individual.

Section 430 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that when the complaint upon its face discloses that there is a nonjoinder or defect of parties defendant, the defendant may raise the question by demurrer, but if such defect does not appear from the complaint itself, then, by authority of section 433 of said code, the objection may be taken by answer. Section 434 provides: “If no objection be taken, either by demurrer or answer, the defendant must be deemed to have waived the same, ’ ’ etc. The complaint does not show, upon its face that there was a defect or nonjoinder of par-ties defendant, and, as seen, the defendant failed or omitted' to set up a plea in abatement on that ground. j

In this state the common-law rule that the liabilities of a partnership are joint, or not joint and several, has been expressly adopted into our code (Civ. Code, sec. 2442; see, also, Iwanga v. Hagopian, 39 Cal. App. 584 [179 Pac. 523]). The action here should have been against all the partners,) if the obligation sued on was a partnership liability and the' defendant was desirous of binding the partnership by this' action. But the case was tried by the defendant upon the theory that the obligation sued on was that of a partnership, evidence having been received without objection tending to show that the obligation was that of a partnership of which the defendant was a member, and, therefore, not his individual obligation. And it has been held that, although a copartner sued separately upon a partnership obligation does not, by either of the two ways laid down by the above-named sections of the Code of Civil Procedure, object to the complaint or the action on the ground of nonjoinder of parties defendant, the question whether the obligation is *714 joint or several will be deemed to be an issue in the case, if, without objection, evidence is received tending to prove that the obligation sued on is that of a partnership and not that of the defendant, individually. (Miner v. Rickey, 5 Cal. App. 451, 453 [90 Pac. 718].) But with that issue thus brought into the case here, an examination of the evidence, as it appears before us, has not convinced us that we would be justified in holding that the findings fail of sufficient support.

The work, compensation for which the defendant seeks by this action, was performed at what are known as “The Wright Mineral Springs,” a health resort. Where these springs are located the record fails to disclose. This, however, is a matter of no consequence.

There is no contradiction of the testimony of the plaintiff that the negotiations leading to his employment were, on the defendant’s part, conducted by the defendant. The defendant, however, claims that the employment was for and on behalf of the “Wright Springs Company,” a partnership of which he and one Miss Mamie Wright were the members. The plaintiff testified that he went to the springs in the spring of the year 1921 in the hope of being cured of a rheumatic affliction from which he was then suffering. While there the defendant employed him to make shakes to be used in the construction of a cabin or a house which the former was erecting. The matter of compensation was agreed upon between him and the defendant and he thereupon proceeded with the work. In the fall of the year 1921 the defendant personally employed plaintiff to remain at the spring as caretaker during the winter soon to follow. He was also to do certain work which was required to be done about the premises. Plaintiff testified that, while he saw Miss Wright at the springs, he had no acquaintance with her, never had any dealings with her in any manner or form, and, although he was aware of the fact that the springs bore the name of “Wright,” he did not know, at the time of his employment or at any other time, until the claim was so made in this action, that Miss Wright was a partner of the defendant, if such was the fact. 'When he first went to the springs, he said, “Krueger had charge of the place. Miss Wright was there”; that a man named Graham was there part of the time and was in the employ of Krueger. *715 “I don’t know Miss Wright,’’ he proceeded. “I was hired by Krueger. ... I never talked to Miss Wright or Graham about working there. ... I didn’t know that it (the springs) was in her name or that she had anything to do with it.” He thought, so he testified, that Krueger was stopping at the springs for his health and that Miss Wright was his nurse. “All the conversation I had about work,” he further testified, “was with Krueger. I never had any conversation with Miss Wright, not much. Whatever was done was because Krueger gave orders. ... I had nothing to do with Miss Wright, so far as the work was concerned. I don’t know of the arrangements between Krueger and Miss Wright. The party that was doing the paying and ordering was Krueger. I got directions from Krueger. Krueger left there (the springs) October 18, 1921. . . . Krueger told me he was going to pay me $75 a month and I board myself out of it. ... I worked all the time. I had a lot of work to do. I received directions from Mr. Krueger ■—letters written by Mr. Krueger and purporting to have been written by him. If there was any arrangement between Krueger and Mamie Wright, I did not know about it.” Plaintiff, on cross-examination, said that he saw Miss Wright at the springs, and knew that the springs were called “The Wright -Springs Company,” but, he added, “I was not working for the Wright Springs Company.”

The witness A. R. Wilder, a carpenter, who was engaged in building a house for Krueger at the springs or, as he said, “for the Wright Springs Company,” when plaintiff was employed by defendant, testified that he did not actually know but “supposed” that defendant and Miss Wright were partners in the springs, and that the firm name was “Wright Springs Company.” He said that as a general rule directions as to his work were given by Krueger, but that Miss Wright occasionally took part in directing the affairs of the springs. He stated, though, that there were so many “conflicting orders” relative to the work he was doing and was engaged to do, that he finally asked defendant whose orders he was to obey, and that Krueger said he was himself the boss in the building of the cabin.

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Bluebook (online)
232 P. 467, 69 Cal. App. 711, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berringer-v-krueger-calctapp-1924.