Goldwater v. Oltman

292 P. 624, 210 Cal. 408, 71 A.L.R. 871, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 399
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1930
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9754.
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 292 P. 624 (Goldwater v. Oltman) 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
Goldwater v. Oltman, 292 P. 624, 210 Cal. 408, 71 A.L.R. 871, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 399 (Cal. 1930).

Opinion

THE COURT. — In

order to permit a re-examination of the record herein and to give further consideration to several important problems involved on this appeal, a hearing was granted by this court in this case after decision of the District Court of Appeal, in and for the Second Appellate District, Division Two [285 Pac. 734], affirming the. judgment of the trial court. Although we are of the opinion that the District Court of Appeal correctly states the law in reference to the principal point involved on this appeal, due to the importance of the questions involved and due to the fact that we differ from the District Court of Appeal in • reference to several of the minor points involved, we deem it necessary to more completely state the law than was done by the District Court of Appeal. We adopt as part of this opinion the following statement of facts taken from the prevailing opinion of’ the District Court of Appeal:

. “This appeal is taken from a judgment entered-in favor of certain of the defendants following the granting of a *411 motion for nonsuit. An understandable presentation of the points presented for our consideration requires that we first review, as briefly as possible, the extremely voluminous pleadings in order that the issues between the plaintiff and various groups of defendants may be clarified.

■“The second amended complaint, on which the plaintiff went to trial, sets forth ten causes of action. The first, omitting matters not germane to any point in controversy and dispensing with the legal verbiage, may be summarized as follows, the Roman numerals referring to the paragraphs as numbered in the pleading:

“II.
“Defendants Oltman and Morante are partners under the name of ‘Marante Comedy Company’;
“IV.
“All defendants other than Morante and Morante Comedy Company are partners under the name ‘Drascena Productions’;
“V.
“Between October 15 and December 1, 1920, Bloom Film Laboratories, a' copartnership ■ '(hereinafter for brevity referred to as ‘Laboratories’), ‘performed and furnished work, labor and materials, and expended money, all at the special instance and request of defendants’ Morante, Oltman and Morante Comedy Company;
“VI.
“$3,822.94 was the reasonable value of this work, etc., of which $3,000 is unpaid;
“VII.
“February 9, 1921, an agreement was made between defendants Oltman and Morante and Morante Comedy Company as vendors and all the other defendants as vendees, whereby the business and property of the vendors was transferred to the vendees, who, as part of the consideration', ‘promised, assumed and agreed to pay’ to the Laboratories the debt from the vendor. This agreement, the plaintiff, on information and belief, alleges was in writing;
“VIII.
“January 3, 1921, one of the three partners composing the laboratories assigned his interests to the other two, who continued in business under the firm name, and on June 7, *412 1922, assigned and transferred the claim in suit to the plaintiff;
“IX.
“February 9, 1921, ‘as evidence of said obligation of the defendants, excepting only . . . Morante and Morante Comedy Company,’ the defendants other than these two executed and delivered to the Laboratories a note for $3,000, dated as above, payable April 15, drawing seven per cent interest and containing a provision for attorney’s fees to be fixed by the court in case of suit for collection, and signed ‘Drascena Productions, by Charles M. Conant, President’; $1,273.78 is a reasonable attorney fee;
. “X.
“No part of the $3,000 ‘or any amount of principal,' interest or attorney’s fees, of said note’ has been paid;
“XII.
“None of the defendants has filed certificates of co-' partnership in the clerk’s office.
“The second, third and fourth causes of action are identi-1 cal with the first, with these exceptions; the second omits paragraph six, alleging reasonable value, and in lieu thereof alleges a promise to pay the Laboratories and a part pay-' ment, leaving a $3,000 balance unpaid; the third omits paragraphs five and. six and substitutes an allegation of account stated between Morante Comedy Company and the Laboratories; and the fourth, with the same omissions as the third, alleges the original indebtedness to have been on a book account.
“The remaining causes of action all plead that the defendants other than Morante and Morante Comedy Company are members of and unit holders in an association known as ‘Drascena Productions,’ all the business of which is transacted and all the property of which is held in trust by five of the defendants as trustees under a declaration of trust of record in Los Angeles county, the provisions of which are, at least in part, set forth. It is further alleged that each of seventy-two named defendants owns the number of units or ‘shares of trust certificates’ set opposite his name in the complaint. Except for the omission of the allegation as to partnership of those defendants connected with Drascena Productions found in paragraph four of the first cause of action, and by reference thereto incorporated *413 in causes two, three and four, and the substitution therefor of the allegation as to nature and membership of Drascena Productions above referred to, causes five to eight, both inclusive, contain the same allegations as do cotises one to four, respectively; that is to say, five corresponds to one, counting on the reasonable value of the work done, etc., as the basis of the original indebtedness; six corresponds to two, counting on the promise of Morante Comedy Company to pay, and so on.
“It is to be noted that while the first eight causes of action differ in the details above enumerated, they all set up the note executed by Drascena Productions. The ninth and tenth causes of action do not. The ninth cause of action alleges indebtedness to the Laboratories on the part of all the defendants on a book account showing $3,000 due and an assignment thereof to the plaintiff, while the tenth sets up an account stated between the Laboratories and all the defendants together with such assignment. With these exceptions the last two causes of action are but a repetition of the allegations of the first, with paragraphs four, six and nine, hereinabove briefed, omitted.
“Drascena Productions as a separate entity was not made a party to the action, the title of the same as it appears from the complaint listing all defendants other than Oltman and Morante as ‘ copartners doing business under the firm name and style of “Drascena Productions.” ’ The transcript fails to show service on or appearance by some of the defendants, including Oltman, Morante and the Morante Comedy Company; others who were served defaulted, and their defaults were duly entered.

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 624, 210 Cal. 408, 71 A.L.R. 871, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldwater-v-oltman-cal-1930.