Hawley Bros. Hardware Co. v. Brownstone

56 P. 468, 123 Cal. 643, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 1131
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1899
DocketS. F. No. 870
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 56 P. 468 (Hawley Bros. Hardware Co. v. Brownstone) 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
Hawley Bros. Hardware Co. v. Brownstone, 56 P. 468, 123 Cal. 643, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 1131 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Action upon certain six promissory notes by verified complaint. A demurrer, on the grounds: (1) of insufficiency of facts, and (2) ambiguity, was overruled. Defendants answered denying that they had not paid the notes in suit, and as a separate defense alleged that prior to the commencement of the action defendants transferred to plaintiff certain promissory notes as collateral security for the indebtedness sued upon; that as to one of said collateral notes, made by one J. S. Branch, for the sum of six hundred and two dollars and forty-two cents “plaintiff neglected and refused to take proceedings to enforce its collection and permitted the same without the consent and against the will of defendants to become barred by the statute of limitations,” and that if plaintiff had used reasonable diligence the said note could have been collected; as to the other collateral notes it is alleged on information and belief that plaintiff could have enforced collection sufficient to pay and discharge defendants’ indebtedness to plaintiff by the exercise of reasonable diligence; that at different times before the commencemnt of the action defendants demanded of plaintiff to take immediate steps to enforce the collection of the said collateral notes or return the same to defendants, but plaintiff refused to do the one or the other; that by reason of plaintiff’s gross carelessness and negligence in failing and refusing to enforce collection of said notes, defendants have been damaged in a sum largely in excess of any amount due plaintiff upon the obligations in suit; that all said collateral notes were, when transferred.to plaintiff, due, owing and payable from the parties respectively executing them; “that some amounts have been paid upon said notes, the amount and time of payment being unknown to the defendants.” An accounting between plaintiff and defendants with reference to the notes sued upon and the payment made upon said transferred notes is asked, and that plaintiff be charged with the face value of all said assigned collateral notes, and that they be applied in payment of the notes sued upon.

A demurrer for insufficiency of facts was interposed to the [645]*645answer, and on the further ground of uncertainty. The court sustained the demurrer to the answer and gave -plaintiff judgment, from which defendants appeal.

1. It does not appear anywhere in the complaint who are the defendants, except in the caption or title of the cause of action. They are there stated to be “Isaac Brownstone and Joseph Brownstone, partners, doing business under the firm name and style of I. Brownstone & Co., defendants.” The references to defendants in first count in the body of the complaint are as follows: “Comes now plaintiff .... and for a first cause of action herein against defendant, alleges: .... during all the time in this second amended complaint mentioned .... the above named defendant was a copartnership, and carrying on business as merchants and traders .... under the firm name and style of I. Brownstone & Co., and that the members of said firm of I. Brownstone & Co. are residents of the county and state aforesaid.” But there is here no allegation as to who constitute the firm. “Defendant, by its firm name, made and delivered to plaintiff its certain promissory note,” et cetera. The note is signed I. Brownstone & Co. “The defendant has not paid the said note,”' et cetera. The subsequent separate causes of action, of which there are five, read: “For a . . . . cause of action in this its second amended complaint” (the words “against defendant,” as alleged in first count are omitted) plaintiff alleges: .... “Defendant, by its firm name, made and delivered to the plaintiff its certain promissory note,” et cetera; “defendant has not paid the said note.” Each subsequent count contains the same allegations. The notes are all signed I. Brownstone & Co. “Plaintiff prays for judgment against said defendant for the aggregate principal sum of,” et cetera. The demurrer is upon the ground: 1. Of insufficiency of facts; and 2. “Each and every cause of action .... is ambiguous, in that, it alleges that the above-named defendant (singular) was a copartnership, but it does not appear upon the face of the complaint, or any of the causes of action therein stated, which, if any, of the defendants was a copartnership, and whether or not said defendants were or either of said defendants was a copartnership at the time of the commencement of the action”; nor does it appear who, if any, were the members of I. Brownstone & Co.; [646]*646nor does it appear by whom or by which of the defendants, if any, the note in each cause of action was made or delivered to plaintiff.

It is essential to a good complaint that nonpayment be alleged, as failure to pay constitutes the breach. (Scroufe v. Clay, 71 Cal. 123; Notman v. Green, 90 Cal. 172; Barney v. Vigoreaux, 92 Cal. 631, and numerous other cases.)

To- allege that “the note nor no part thereof has been paid,” or to allege that “defendant (where there is but one defendant) has not paid said note nor any part thereof” is sufficient. The question here is whether it can be ascertained from the complaint who are the defendants, or who is the defendant. The caption is no part of the complaint unless referred to by appropriate allegation in the body of the complaint. To have alleged that “the defendants above named,” et cetera, would have been a good reference, as would have been “the defendants” (plural) without the words “above named.” And where the caption shows two or more defendants, and in the body of the complaint the word “defendant” (singular number) is used, but is manifestly a clerical error which could not have misled the defendants, has been held good on demurrer for ambiguity. (Fay v. McKeever, 59 Cal. 307.) The rule generally is, that if the party was not misled to his prejudice, the ambiguity cannot be said to affect his substantial rights, and a judgment should not be reversed by reason of such defect or error; and so held if the pleading is easy of comprehension and free from reasonable doubt. (Gassen v. Bower, 72 Cal. 555; Alexander v. Central etc. Co., 104 Cal. 532; Salmon v. Wilson, 41 Cal. 595.)

Ho general rule can be laid down to determine the exact degree of ambiguity which will be fatal on demurrer. The case here is wholly unlike that of Fay v. McKeever, supra, where the court thought the error clearly clerical. Here the error is persistent" and runs through six separate counts, and in the use of the possessive pronoun, referring to the defendant, the neuter gender, singular number, is used, showing that the pleader had in mind the copartnership as the defendant and not the persons or one of the persons composing the partnership. It is not possible by any reading of the complaint, without interpolation, to say, whether one, and if one, which one, of the persons named in [647]*647the caption, or whether both, or whether the partnership by its common name, is the defendant. To make the pleading intelligible and free from ambiguity we must change the language in several material particulars. We must change the word "defendant” to "defendants” in all the counts, wherever the word defendant appears; we must change the word “its” to "their,” so that it will refer to the persons sued as copartners, and we must make the complaint show, what it does not, that they, the defendants named, were copartners as I. Brownstone & Co.; and that the several notes were executed by these defendants in the copartnership name.

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Bluebook (online)
56 P. 468, 123 Cal. 643, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawley-bros-hardware-co-v-brownstone-cal-1899.