Earl v. Lofquist

27 P.2d 416, 135 Cal. App. 373, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 291
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8992.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 416 (Earl v. Lofquist) 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
Earl v. Lofquist, 27 P.2d 416, 135 Cal. App. 373, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 291 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

OGDEN, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of respondent after his demurrer to appellants’ amended complaint was sustained and the latter declined to amend. Although the defendant R. W. Nuttall is now deceased and substitution has been made, he is referred to herein as respondent.

The action is representative in character, being brought by appellants as shareholders on behalf of the defendant Lopez Canyon Oil Company, a corporation, its directors refusing to bring suit. It is based upon fraud and seeks the recovery to the corporation of certain real property in the possession of respondent alleged to have been fraudulently obtained by him from the corporation, the reasonable value of other real property allegedly obtained by the same means and under the same circumstances, but since disposed of, and the rents received from the properties by respondent.

In substance it is alleged that respondent, a director and secretary of the corporation, which he dominated, falsely and with the fraudulent intent to defraud the corporation and to induce its directors to make the conveyances complained of, represented to the other directors that the corporation was heavily indebted and that it was necessary to dispose of its real property in order to pay its debts; that, relying thereon, the board of directors was thereby fraudulently induced by respondent to convey said property to the defendant S. P. Nuttall, the wife of respondent and a stockholder of the corporation, in consideration of the payment by her of the debts of the corporation. It is further alleged that the latter took and held the property in her name solely for the use and benefit of respondent, that no consideration whatsoever was given therefor, there being in truth no corporate indebtedness to be paid.

The amended complaint contains what are designated as five separate and distinct causes of action. The so-called first cause of action refers only to that portion of the real property still retained by respondent and contains merely the usual averments found in ordinary quiet title actions, to wit, ownership and right of possession in the corporation and claims adverse thereto by respondent and his wife. The *376 so-called second cause of action refers to the same property, incorporates by reference the preceding allegations and sets forth in detail the fraudulent transaction complained of. The third and fourth so-called causes of action incorporate by reference the allegations of fraud and seek the recovery of the reasonable value of those portions of the property subsequently disposed of by respondent. By their so-called fifth cause of action the recovery of all rents received by respondent from the property is sought. The demurrer is to each so-called cause of action on the general ground that a cause of action is not stated and as to the second, third, fourth and fifth causes of action pleads the provisions of section 318 and subdivision 4 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure as a bar to recovery.

We cannot subscribe to either of the two contentions relied upon by respondent in support of the judgment. He first relies on the fact, which affirmatively appears from the complaint, that appellants were not stockholders of the corporation at the time of the acts complained of and argues that where the corporation has lost its right of action by reason of the statute of limitations, the action cannot be. maintained by a stockholder who purchased his stock subsequent to the date of the transaction complained of. This merely begs the real question with which we are concerned in this appeal, namely, whether the cause of action is barred by the statute as to the corporation. If the right to maintain the action is barred as to the corporation by the statute of limitations, neither the corporation nor a stockholder in its behalf, irrespective of when he became such, can maintain it. The fact that a stockholder is the nominal plaintiff does not in any manner enlarge the rights and remedies of the action (Turner v. Markham, 155 Cal. 562 [102 Pac. 272]). But where the cause of action exists in favor of the corporation, a stockholder thereof may maintain it even though he acquired his shares after the fraud complained of (Harvey v. Meigs, 17 Cal. App. 353 [119 Pac. 941]; Beal v. Smith, 46 Cal. App. 271 [189 Pac. 341]). Federal New Equity Rule No. 27 and the decisions of the federal courts based thereon requiring the plaintiff to have been a shareholder at the time of the transaction complained of, or that his share must have *377 devolved on him by operation of law, are not the law of this state (6a Cal. Jur. 818, n. 13).

Respondent next contends that appellants, having waited approximately one year and five months after the date they allege discovery of the fraud before commencing the action, are guilty of laches. Here again he avoids the real question, for if the statute has not run no presumption of laches arises from the mere fact of delay (Haynes v. Indio Levee District, 46 Cal. App. 436 [189 Pac. 475]), in the absence of an affirmative showing of prejudice resulting therefrom.

We are, however, of the opinion that the action is barred by the statutes of limitation pleaded and that the demurrer was therefore properly sustained. The fraudulent representations and the conveyance complained of are alleged to have occurred on October 16, 1918, and the action was commenced on February 3, 1930, over eleven years later.

The third, fourth and fifth causes of action being for relief, by way of monetary compensation, on the ground of fraud, subdivision 4 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure applies. The period of limitation therein provided is three years from the date of discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud.

In Consolidated R. & P. Co. v. Scarborough, 216 Cal. 698 [16 Pac. (2d) 268], containing an exhaustive review of the pertinent authorities, the rules of pleading governing the statement of a cause of action for fraud committed more than three years prior to the commencement of suit are clarified and definitely stated. These rules require that the pleader must not only show (1) that he did not discover the fraud until within three years next before the action was begun and (2) that the fraud was committed under such circumstances that he would not be presumed to have had knowledge of it at the time, but (3) he must also set forth the times and circumstances under which the facts constituting the fraud came to his knowledge so that the court may determine from the allegations of the complaint whether the discovery was within that period.

Applying the foregoing to the pleading in the present case, it is apparent that appellants have not met the third requirement. In justification of the delay in bringing the action it is pleaded merely that, since the transfer of *378

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Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 416, 135 Cal. App. 373, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earl-v-lofquist-calctapp-1933.