Cal. Safe Deposit & Tr. Co. v. Sierra Valleys Ry.

112 P. 274, 158 Cal. 690, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 431
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1910
DocketSac. No. 1759.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 112 P. 274 (Cal. Safe Deposit & Tr. Co. v. Sierra Valleys Ry.) 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.

Bluebook
Cal. Safe Deposit & Tr. Co. v. Sierra Valleys Ry., 112 P. 274, 158 Cal. 690, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 431 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

In April, 1895, Sierra Valleys Railway Company, a California corporation, having taken the statutory steps for the authorization by its stockholders of a bonded indebtedness, caused one thousand bonds of one thousand dol *692 lars each, falling due in twenty years, with interest coupons attached, to be signed by its president- and secretary. It also executed and delivered to the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company, as trustee, a mortgage or deed of trust of all its property to secure said bonds and coupons. Three hundred of the bonds were duly issued to Henry A. Bowen.

This action was commenced by the trustee to foreclose the security, it being claimed that the said trustee had exercised the option granted to it by the mortgage or deed of trust to declare the principal sum due in advance of maturity upon default, continuing for six months, in the payment of interest. Other breaches of the conditions of the instrument securing the bonds were alleged. The Boca and Loyalton Railroad Company and Cora Chambers Pool were made defendants, and were alleged to claim an interest in the property. It is alleged that Bowen, also named as a defendant, was the owner and holder of a number of overdue interest coupons, which had been detached from the bonds originally owned by him, said bonds having passed into the ownership of Nevada-California-Oregon Railway, a corporation.

Bowen answered and cross-complained, seeking a foreclosure and the payment to him of the amount due on his coupons.

The court found that certain coupons including those held by Bowen had matured more than four years prior to the commencement of the action, and that any claim thereon was barred by sections 335 and 337 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The material allegations of the complaint were found to be true, and a decree of foreclosure providing for payment out of the proceeds of the sale of the amount due on all bonds and coupons, except those found to be barred by limitation, was entered. Prom this judgment Bowen appeals. The only question presented is whether the court below was correct in holding that he had lost his right to relief by lapse of time.

The coupons in question were in the usual form, each consisting of a simple promise to pay to bearer, at a given date and place, the sum of thirty dollars, being six months’ interest on one of the bonds. In the absence of any provision to the contrary in the bonds, or in the instrument securing them, it is undoubtedly the general rule that such coupons are independent obligations, and that, at least when they have been detached from the bonds and. transferred to others than the *693 holders of the bonds, the statute of limitations begins to run from the time of their maturity. (Short on Law of Railway Bonds, sec. 75 ; Jones on Corporation Bonds and Mortgages, sec. 267 ; Amy v. Dubuque, 98 U. S. 470 ; Clark v. Iowa City, 20 Wall. 585 ; Koshkonong v. Burton, 104 U. S. 668 ; Nash v. El Dorado County, 24 Fed. 252 ; Huey v. Macon Co., 35 Fed. 481; Galveston v. Loonie, 54 Tex. 517 ; Threadgill v. Commrs., 116 N. C. 616, [21 S. E. 425].) The appellant claims, however, that a different rule has been established in this state by the decision in Meyer v. Porter, 65 Cal. 67, [2 Pac. 884], and the two companion cases of Roeding v. Porter, (Cal.) 2 Pac. 888, and Haumeister v. Porter, (Cal.) 3 Pac. 123, decided in the same month as the Meyer case, and based upon its authority alone. Meyer v. Porter was an appeal from a judgment denying a writ of mandate to compel the treasurer of the city of Sacramento to pay certain coupons out of funds in his possession. The trial court had sustained a demurrer to the petition for the writ. In the supreme court various objections to the granting of the relief sought were considered and overruled. The opinion concludes with these words: "and as the coupons partake of the nature of the bonds to which they belong, and against which the statute of limitations had not run, they were not barred by the statute.” There is no further discussion of the point, nor is there, in the report of the case, any showing of the facts upon which the bar of the statute was claimed to have arisen. We are not informed whether the coupons were independent obligations, negotiable, and enforceable by others than holders of the bonds, nor whether, if so enforceable, a right of action had in fact accrued at such time as to make the bar of the statute applicable. Under these circumstances, we do not regard the isolated expression above quoted as binding this court to the doctrine that an action upon interest coupons is never barred by lapse of time until a right of action on the bond itself would be barred. On the contrary, we are inclined to take the view expressed by the United States circuit court of appeals for the ninth circuit in Mather v. City and County of San Francisco 115 Fed. 37, 43, [52 C. C. A. 631, 639], where the following language was used in reference to the foregoing statement of this court in Meyer v. Porter: “It is claimed for this utterance of the court that it announces the rule that an action upon coupons. *694 is not barred until the statute of limitations has run against the bonds to which they were attached. We do not so understand the decision, although it is impossible, from the meager statement of the case, to determine the precise bearing of the remarks of the court. We are inclined to think that by the use of the language so quoted it was intended only to affirm the well-settled rule that in the application of the statute of limitations the coupon, although it may not be in form the same kind of instrument as the bond to which it belongs, will partake of the contractual nature of the latter, and both will be governed by the same statute of limitations; that is to say, if the bond be a specialty the coupon, which may be a simple promise to pay, will be considered a specialty, and be governed by the statute of limitations applicable to specialties. City of Lexington v. Butler, 14 Wall. 282.” Although the distinction between specialties and writings not under seal had been abolished in this state, it is probable that the writer of the opinion in Meyer v. Porter had in mind the rule just referred to. To this extent, it is quite true that “the coupons partake of the nature of the bonds to which they belong,” and the question whether an action on the coupons is barred must accordingly be answered by reference to the statute prescribing the period of limitation for an action on the bonds. This is all that was decided in Lexington v. Butler, 14 Wall. 282, and City of Kenosha v. Lamson, 9 Wall.

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Bluebook (online)
112 P. 274, 158 Cal. 690, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cal-safe-deposit-tr-co-v-sierra-valleys-ry-cal-1910.