H. K. McCann Co. v. Denny

270 P. 190, 205 Cal. 147, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 501
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1928
DocketDocket No. S.F. 12447.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 270 P. 190 (H. K. McCann Co. v. Denny) 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
H. K. McCann Co. v. Denny, 270 P. 190, 205 Cal. 147, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 501 (Cal. 1928).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

In this action the plaintiff sought to recover certain sums alleged to be due to it from the defendants upon the stockholders’ liability of said defendants and each of them as stockholders of The Luthy Company, a California corporation, which had been organized for the purpose of manufacturing a certain automobile storage battery, and which had entered into certain agreements with the plaintiff, a national advertising agency, for the performance of certain services by the latter in conducting an advertising campaign and in preparing and placing the advertising to be done by The Luthy Company, in the course of marketing its products, in periodicals and upon sign-boards throughout the *149 country. The complaint is in two counts, in the first of which the plaintiff seeks to recover from said defendants the proportionate sums claimed to be due from each under their aforesaid stockholders’ liability on account of certain payments of money which were made by the plaintiff to various periodicals with which it had placed the advertising of its principal, The Luthy Company, from time to time, and the bills for which the plaintiff had paid under the terms of its arrangement with its principal, wherein it was in substance agreed that the bills for advertising were to be sent by the publishers thereof to said advertising agency, and when paid by it were to be charged to the account of its principal. The evidence in the case shows and the court finds that while the aforesaid agreement between the plaintiff and The Luthy Company was entered into in April, 1921, the first advertising contracts placed by said agency thereunder bore a date not earlier than August 22, 1921, and such advertising thereafter continued to be placed with various publications up to April 6, 1922, when The Luthy Company, having become involved in financial difficulties, ceased advertising. Between the two foregoing dates the plaintiff, as shown by its bill of particulars, paid on account of its principal the several advertising bills, the sum of which furnishes the basis of recovery sought by the first count of plaintiff’s complaint herein. The main defense urged by the defendants herein is that of the statute of limitations embodied in section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure, relating to the liability of stockholders of corporations. The trial court sustained the defendants’ plea in that regard and by its judgment determined that as to the plaintiff’s first alleged cause of action it should take nothing, but that said defendants were entitled to have judgment in their favor for their costs.

As to the plaintiff’s second count or cause of action it is also based upon the terms of its aforesaid agreement with The Luthy Company made and entered into on or about April 6, 1921, by the terms of which it was agreed and understood that beginning from the date thereof the plaintiff would be entitled to charge a service fee of $250 a month against its said principal for its services in planning and handling the latter’s advertising campaign. This initial fee, however, was to be credited with certain commissions which might be earned by said plaintiff in the course of said cam *150 paign and which, when the same amounted to a certain sum, were to extinguish said service fee. It appears from the plaintiff’s bill of particulars that at the time of the commencement of this action on May 8, 1924, there was due to said plaintiff from said corporation on account of its aforesaid service fee the sum of $2,934.67, for the proportionate share of which, claimed to be due from said defendants upon their aforesaid stockholders’ liability, plaintiff sues in its second count or cause of action. As to this cause of action the defendants also pleaded the statute of limitations as embodied in section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and as to this count also the trial court by its judgment determined that the plaintiff was entitled to take nothing, but that said defendants were entitled to a judgment in their favor for their costs. Prom the judgment of the trial court upon both causes of action the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Upon the plaintiff’s first alleged cause of action we are of the opinion that the trial court was in error in holding that it was subject to the plea of the statute of limitations relating to the commencement of an action upon the liability of stockholders of a corporation. It sufficiently appears from the record herein that in entering into and carrying out its agreement with The Luthy Company for the placing of its advertising the plaintiff was acting throughout as the agent of said corporation and not otherwise; that the advertising which, beginning in the month of August, 1921, it placed for and on account of its said principal, was advertising for which The Luthy Company was primarily liable to the various publications wherein such advertising was published, and that in providing in its agreement with said corporation that the bills for such advertising were to be sent primarily to the plaintiff for payment it was to act as the agent of said corporation and not otherwise in the payment of these bills, and upon payment of the same was entitled to charge the amount thereof against the account of its said principal. It would seem to be clear that until such advertising began to be placed and published no liability of any kind had been created as to such corporation, and it would further seem to be clear that after the aforesaid date of the placing of such advertising and of the creation for the first time of any liability on the part of The Luthy Company on account of the *151 publication thereof no liability arose on its part to reimburse the plaintiff for any sums expended by it by virtue solely of its aforesaid agency until in that capacity the plaintiff had made payment on account of its principal’s bills. The case as thus presented, while not precisely analogous to the cases presently to be discussed, is not distinguishable in principle from these eases as to the rule applicable to the liability of stockholders. In the ease of Yule v. Bishop, 133 Cal. 574 [62 Pac. 68, 65 Pac. 1094], it was held that the liability of the stockholders of a corporation to one who had become an indorser upon the promissory note of said corporation, and who as such indorser had been required to pay said note and thus extinguish the same, did not arise until the payment of said note by such indorser, and hence that the liability of the stockholders to such indorser would not be barred by the statute of limitations until three years after the date of such payment. In the case of Ryland v. Commercial Sav. Bank, 127 Cal. 525 [59 Pac. 989], which was an action by a surety upon the note of a corporation to recover from the stockholders thereof upon their liability as such upon the payment by said surety of the note of said corporation, it was held that the statute of limitations was not set in motion until the payment by the surety of the corporate note. In the case of Wills v. Wollner, 21 Cal. App. 528 [132 Pac. 283], the rule laid down in the foregoing cases was followed and distinguished from a line of cases presently to be commented upon. In the later case of Finch v. Finch, 68 Cal. App. 72 [228 Pac. 553], the line of eases above referred to, beginning with the case of Hunt v. Ward, 99 Cal. 612 [37 Am. St. Rep.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P. 190, 205 Cal. 147, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-k-mccann-co-v-denny-cal-1928.