Johnson v. Hinkel

154 P. 487, 29 Cal. App. 78, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 30
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1542.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 154 P. 487 (Johnson v. Hinkel) 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
Johnson v. Hinkel, 154 P. 487, 29 Cal. App. 78, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 30 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This action was brought to recover damages in the sum of twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars upon a stockholder’s liability against defendants, who were stockholders in the Lorene Oil Company, a corporation.

The damage claimed arose from the removal of a quantity of casing from a certain oil well which had been drilled by the Lorene Oil Company upon the plaintiff’s land in the Coalinga oil fields, upon the abandonment by that company of said lands and of its operations thereon under a certain lease. The action was based upon a breach of the terms of the lease, which had been entered into by the parties thereto under the following circumstances: On the sixteenth day of March, 1907, the plaintiff entered into a lease with one Wilcox, with the object in view that the former’s land should be explored for oil and developed. The agreement required Wilcox to drill a well to a depth of at least three thousand feet, unless oil should be discovered in quantities of twenty-five barrels of oil per day at a less depth. If oil was discovered, the lessee was to pay to the lessor one-eighth royalty, and he was also given an option to purchase the property for the sum of twenty thousand dollars. Shortly thereafter, and during the same year, Wilcox assigned his interest in this agreement to the Lorene Oil Company, which assumed all his obligations thereunder. The company drilled a well to a depth of 3,660 feet, being 660 feet deeper than was required by the contract, and, *80 not having made a discovery of oil, abandoned the property. The lease contained the following provision with reference to abandonment: “In the event oil is not found in paying quantities by the lessee on the land so leased after the compliance with the terms herein, and said lessee desires to abandon the enterprise and to be released from the terms hereof, he shall have the privilege of removing all engines, tanks and fixtures above ground which he may have placed on said land, but shall not remove the casing from any well or plug any wells thereon without the written consent of said lessor.” Upon the abandonment of the property the company, contrary to this last mentioned provision, removed over ten thousand feet of casing without the written consent of the lessor, and the breach of the agreement in this respect gave rise to the present controversy.

■ Plaintiff recovered judgment against the defendants in the sum of twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars, and this is an appeal from such judgment and from an order denying defendants a new trial.

The defendants make the following points for a reversal of the judgment: (1st) That the action was barred by the statute of limitations; (2d) errors in the instructions and in the admission of testimony concerning the measure of damages; (3d) that the contract was illegal, and consequently no recovery could be had thereon; and (4th) that the court had no jurisdiction as to two of the defendants.

In support of the first contention it is the claim of the defendants that the action is barred by virtue of the provisions of section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The action was commenced as to certain of the defendants on October 23, 1912, and additional defendants were added by an amended complaint filed March 27, 1913. It is argued that as it appears on the face of the complaint that the damages were sustained on November 1, 1909, the demurrer should have been sustained as to the parties joined as defendants under the amended complaint; and as to the other defendants, there being a conflict of testimony, that the question should have been left to the jury as to whether the damage was done on October 6, 1909, as testified to by defendants’ witnesses, or on November 10th, as stated by the witnesses produced on behalf of the plaintiff:. The amended complaint upon which the ease went to trial alleged that the fact upon which liability was asserted was not discovered by plaintiff until November, 1910. *81 If the right of action accrued at this date, the statute does not operate as a shield to any of the defendants except as hereinafter stated. It is insisted by defendants that an action against stockholders in this state is barred within three years from the time the liability is created, and the fact that discovery is not made of the liability within that time is of no consequence, the element of discovery not being a factor for consideration under the section. The trial court instructed the jury as follows: “I instruct you that if you find that the plaintiff commenced this action against defendants within three years after the discovery by him that the Lorene Oil Company had committed the acts complained of, and that plaintiff used reasonable diligence in the discovery of the fact that the acts complained of had been committed, and if you further find that the said acts of the Lorene Oil Company resulted in an injury for which plaintiff is entitled to damages, then each of the defendants is individually and personally liable. ...” It is conceded that if counsel for the appellants is correct in his construction of section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the trial court was in error in so instructing the jury, and that such error is sufficiently important to justify a reversal of the case.

Section 359 reads as follows: “This title does not affect actions against directors or stockholders of a corporation, to recover a penalty or forfeiture imposed, or to enforce a liability created by law; but such actions must be brought within three years after the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts upon which the penalty or forfeiture attached, or the liability was created.” In support of his contention that the proper construction of the statute is that such action must be brought within three years after the liability is created, and that it does not extend to three years after the discovery of the fact creating such liability, it is argued that neither grammatically nor logically does the section warrant the construction placed upon it by the trial court; and that the appellate courts of this state have never considered this doctrine of the discovery of facts applicable to stockholders’ liability, and that the phrase “discovery by the aggrieved party” refers to the facts upon which a “penalty or forfeiture attached,” and does not refer to the “liability created by law”; that it refers to illegal acts of directors for which they are liable to either a penalty *82 or forfeiture, and does not apply to the ordinary civil obligation created by law against the stockholders.

The element of discovery in actions of this character was recognized in Moore v. Boyd, 74 Cal. 167, [15 Pac. 670]; but in the later case of Royal Trust Co. v. MacBean, 168 Cal. 642, [144 Pac. 138], it would seem that this doctrine has been rejected, for it is there said that a fair reading of the section makes the discovery the starting point of the period of limitation only in eases of actions to recover a penalty or forfeiture, and that in actions to enforce “a liability created by law,” the period of limitation is three years from the creation of the liability. We conclude, therefore, that the court erred in giving the instruction complained of.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 P. 487, 29 Cal. App. 78, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-hinkel-calctapp-1915.