Goddard v. Security Title Insurance & Guarantee Co.

92 P.2d 804, 14 Cal. 2d 47, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 304
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1939
DocketL. A. 16709
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 92 P.2d 804 (Goddard v. Security Title Insurance & Guarantee Co.) 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
Goddard v. Security Title Insurance & Guarantee Co., 92 P.2d 804, 14 Cal. 2d 47, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 304 (Cal. 1939).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Upon rehearing, we hereby adopt the former opinion of this court, prepared by Mr. Justice Lang-don, with certain changes hereinafter appearing. The said opinion reads as follows:

“This is an action against stockholders of Metropolitan Trust Company, a corporation, to recover on their proportional liability for the debts of the corporation. The obligation arose in 1930, before the repeal of our statutory provision governing this liability. The cause of action arose out of the alleged violation by the corporation of instructions concerning the use of trust money paid to it by plaintiff.
“In 1930, Earle C. Dingwell, nephew of plaintiff, owned real estate and personal property in southern California, considered to be worth about $1,600,000. The properties were encumbered with a number of mortgages, trust deeds and other liens, and these obligations of Dingwell, together with the claims of unsecured creditors, amounted to about $1,000,000. The creditors were pressing for payment, and loss of the properties was imminent, when Dingwell evolved a plan to place them in trust with Metropolitan Trust Company, to hold and administer them and to pay claims. As part of the plan, Dingwell and another party interested were each to provide $50,000 in cash. Dingwell approached plaintiff, his uncle, who resided in Philadelphia, to borrow the money, and plaintiff requested that the proposal be submitted to his legal adviser. The trust plan was accordingly presented, followed later by the completed trust indenture, setting forth certain specific terms and conditions regarding releases by creditors, clearing of most of the encumbrances except first deeds of trust, etc. This was signed and forwarded to the trust company in California on September 12, 1930. On September 24, 1930, plaintiff transferred to the company the sum of $49,280, ear-marked ‘Dingwell-Goddard *50 Trust’. In response to requested instructions as to use of the funds, plaintiff wired the company on October 17, 1930: ‘Deliver to Earle C. Dingwell funds on deposit to my credit if all conditions of trust are satisfactorily arranged.’ The money was thereafter expended by the trust company, but a number of the trust conditions were never performed. The trustee failed to obtain title to the personal property, permitted unauthorized encumbrances, failed to secure required releases, and in various other ways did not carry out the terms of the agreement. Ultimately the scheme failed in its object, foreclosure suits were instituted, and the properties were lost. Plaintiff was unable to recover the money lent and the security therefor having been wiped out, he brougli: suit.
“Two actions were commenced. The first, filed in October, 1932, in the federal District Court, was against the Metropolitan Trust Company. The complaint was framed on a theory of conversion. To plaintiff’s second amended complaint, filed in March, 1933, the defendant demurred, generally and specially, on a number of grounds. The demurrer was sustained with right to apply for leave to amend. But later, when an amended complaint was tendered, the court refused to permit its filing, and on June 1, 1934; judgment was entered, in which it was ordered that the action be ‘dismissed with prejudice'. Appeal was taken and the Circuit Court of Appeals, with one judge dissenting, upheld the judgment, mainly on the theory that an action for conversion would not lie under the facts alleged, and that the remedy, if any, was an action on the case, the recovery being limited to the damages proximately resulting from the alleged violation of instructions. (See Goodard v. Metropolitan Trust Co., 82 Fed. [2d] 902.) The dissenting judge considered the proposed amended complaint sufficient, and expressed himself forcefully and at length to that effect. (See 82 Fed. [2d] 913.)
“On October 21, 1933, while this action against the corporation was pending in the Federal court, plaintiff filed the present suit against defendants, stockholders of the corporation, in the superior court of Los Angeles, alleging substantially the same cause of action with corrected pleadings. A demurrer was overruled, and the case was set to be tried November 2, 1936. In June the Circuit Court of Appeals *51 handed down its decision, and thereupon defendants amended their answer to plead the defense of res judicata as a complete bar to the action. The case was tried, certain amendments were allowed to conform to proof, and the matter submitted. On May 26, 1937, the trial court gave judgment in favor of plaintiff against defendants in the total amount of $69,842.13. Defendants appealed.
“On the merits of plaintiff's claim that the corporation violated instructions concerning the use of his money, thereby causing the loss, we see no ground for disturbing the conclusion of the court below. The evidence was voluminous, and subject, as is usual in such cases, to different inferences, but those drawn by the trial court and expressed in its comprehensive findings are supported by sufficient evidence, and it is unnecessary to review the record at length. Nor do we find any substantial merit in the defense of the statute of limitations. In our opinion the trial court correctly placed the creation of the liability at the time the trust agreement was signed by the trustee, October 23, 1930. The action was filed on October 21, 1933, within the three-year period prescribed by section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Defendants’ plea is based upon the contention that the liability arose on September 24, 1930, when the money was first delivered to the corporation. But the action was for damages for violation of the terms of the agreement, and no liability of this type could arise prior to the signing of the agreement. It follows that the action was brought in time.
“The major defense, and the only one which requires extended discussion, is that the judgment in the prior action in the federal court is res jv,dicata and therefore a complete bar to the present action. To determine this point it may be desirable first to review some of the principles governing the effect of judgments of dismissal and judgments entered after the sustaining of demurrers without leave to amend.
“First, a final judgment, rendered upon the merits by a court having jurisdiction of the cause, is conclusive of the rights of the parties and those in privity with them, and is a complete bar to a new suit between them on the same cause of action. This is the general doctrine of res judicata. (See 2 Freeman on Judgments, [5th ed.], sec. 627, p. 1321 et seq.; von Moschzisker, Res Judicata, 38 Yale L. J. 299; *52 Price v. Sixth Dist. Agricultural Assn., 201 Cal. 502 [258 Pac. 387].) Second, a judgment not rendered on the merits does not operate as a bar. (Campanella v. Campanella, 204 Cal. 515 [269 Pac. 433]; 2 Freeman on Judgments, [5th ed.], sec. 723, p. 1530; 34 C. J. 774, sec. 1193.) Third, a judgment based upon the sustaining of a special demurrer for technical or formal defects is clearly not on the merits and is not a bar to the filing of a new action. (2 Freeman on Judgments, [5th ed.], see. 745, p. 1569; 34 C. J. 797, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.2d 804, 14 Cal. 2d 47, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goddard-v-security-title-insurance-guarantee-co-cal-1939.