Ginsberg Tile Co. v. Faraone

278 P. 866, 99 Cal. App. 381, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 515
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1929
DocketDocket No. 5870.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 278 P. 866 (Ginsberg Tile Co. v. Faraone) 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
Ginsberg Tile Co. v. Faraone, 278 P. 866, 99 Cal. App. 381, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 515 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

GOODELL, J., pro tem.

This appeal was taken on the judgment-roll' alone from an order granting the motion of the respondents to dismiss. The action was commenced in the name “Ginsberg Tile Company, a copartnership, plaintiff,” and the appeal was taken in the same name.

The facts are that on May 25, 1926, a complaint was filed by “Ginsberg Tile Company, a copartnership,” against Salvatore Faraone and Jennie Faraone, his wife, defendants, alleging that certain work had been done by the plaintiff upon the improved real property of the defendants, under an agreement between them whereby plaintiff was to be paid $593.75 for his work, which amount was unpaid, and that a claim of lien had been filed for record on February 24, 1926. The complaint prayed for judgment for $593.75 and for the foreclosure of the lien. There was no allegation in the complaint respecting the copartnership named in the caption, or showing who were its constituent members.

The defendants demurred upon the sole ground that plaintiff had no legal capacity to sue, and they moved to dismiss upon the same ground.

Before the demurrer and motion were heard an amended complaint was filed in the name of the same “plaintiff” with two personal defendants (G. M. Sourich and T. A. Sourich) and four fictitious defendants added, and containing an allegation that plaintiff, Ginsberg Tile Company, was at all times mentioned a copartnership composed of H. Ginsberg and S. Ginsberg, and that they had complied with the provisions of sections 2466 and 2468 of the Civil *383 Code. The amended complaint amplified in many important respects the rather sketchy averments of the original pleading, added allegations not found in the original, and changed the theory of the action from one based upon a contract made directly with Faraone and wife to one based upon a subcontract between plaintiff and G. M. Sourieh and T. A. Sourich, original contractors, for work upon property owned by the Faraones.

The respondents promptly demurred to the amended complaint, again upon the ground of plaintiff’s lack of capacity to sue, and again moved to dismiss upon the same ground, and moved to strike the amended complaint from the files upon the ground that it changed the cause of action originally set forth. The trial court granted the motion to dismiss, but took no action upon the demurrer or motion to strike.

“The principal and substantial question presented for decision,” to adopt the appellant’s own statement of it, “is whether the filing of a complaint by a copartnership in its firm name, instead of having the individual names of the copartners appear in the caption thereof, is such a fatal defect as to render the action a nullity, legally justifying its dismissal on this ground, or whether such a defect is merely an irregularity, which may be taken advantage of by special demurrer, for nonjoinder of parties plaintiff, and if no objection is thus specifically taken to the complaint, the defect is waived.”

Bliss, in his work on Code Pleading, third edition, at section 145, says: “The full names of both plaintiffs and defendants should be given as plaintiffs and as defendants— not, as at common law and in equity, by describing them in the body of the pleading, but in the form of a title to the cause, and they may be afterwards referred to, without naming them, as ‘the plaintiff’ or ‘the defendant.’ In an action by or against a partnership, the full names of all the partners must be stated.”

Section 388 of the Code of Civil Procedure 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 legislature, as early as 1854, thus modified the common-law rule which *384 permits partners neither to sue nor be sued in their partnership name. But it will be noted that the rule was relaxed with respect to defendants only. Had the legislature intended to authorize or sanction a procedure such as that attempted here, obviously it would have been necessary simply to have provided that “the associates may site or be sued by such common name.” On settled and familiar principles it is clear that by expressly permitting such practice in the ease of defendants the legislature manifested an intention to prohibit it in the case of plaintiffs.

“ While a copartnership acting under a fictitious name may be sued in that name . . . the rule governing its prosecution of an action is that the full names of all the partners must be stated.” (Holden v. Mensinger, 175 Cal. 300 [165 Pac. 950].) But it is settled that if plaintiffs do sue in their partnership name the defendants must interpose their objection at the very outset or they waive it (Agricultural Extension Club v. Hirsch, 39 Cal. App. 433 [179 Pac. 430], and Gilman v. Cosgrove, 22 Cal. 356), and it is claimed that in the instant case there has been such waiver.

The basis for this assertion of waiver is not that the defendants made no preliminary objection at all, but that they put it on the wrong ground. The defendants promptly demurred to both complaints, and twice moved to dismiss, upon the' sole ground that the plaintiff had not legal capacity to sue. The appellant contends that this was ineffective, for two reasons, (1st) because the demurrers did not “distinctly specify the grounds” upon which the objection was taken (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 431), and (2d), because the demurrers should have been upon the ground of “a defect or misjoinder of parties plaintiff.” It is difficult to find any real or substantial difference between the ground which was specified and that now urged as the only proper one. When it is borne in mind that waiver presupposes voluntary abandonment, and that the respondents asserted their point without any delay at all, the waiver argument loses its force. As between the two grounds, there is authority both ways. In the Gilman ease, supra, where the defendants answered without having first objected to the suit in the firm name, it was held that they had waived the objection and “should have demurred to the complaint for a defect of parties.” *385 On the other hand, in the Agricultural Extension Club case, supra, where in similar circumstances the defendants likewise answered, it is said that “the defect is one which may be taken advantage of upon the plea that the plaintiff has not legal capacity to sue.” Dicta to the same effect are indeed found in two cases relied upon by the appellant. Thus in Los Angeles Ry. Co. v. Davis, 146 Cal. 179 [106 Am. St. Rep. 20, 79 Pac. 865], the court said that, “The point that plaintiff was not a corporation goes only to its capacity to maintain an action . . . and therefore it could be raised by demurrer to the complaint only under subdivision 2 of section 430 . . . which provides as a cause of demurrer ‘that plaintiff has not legal capacity to sue.’ ...” And so in Fruit Cleaning Co. v. Fresno Co., 94 Fed.

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Bluebook (online)
278 P. 866, 99 Cal. App. 381, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ginsberg-tile-co-v-faraone-calctapp-1929.