MacLeod v. Stelle

249 P. 254, 43 Idaho 64, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 12
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 249 P. 254 (MacLeod v. Stelle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacLeod v. Stelle, 249 P. 254, 43 Idaho 64, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 12 (Idaho 1926).

Opinion

*69 TAYLOR, J.

The two appeals herein were combined and submitted upon one record and argument. Each is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal rendered after a motion to strike and a demurrer to an amended complaint were sustained, the plaintiff declining to further amend. The issues being the same in each, for brevity we will treat only of the MacLeod case. The amended complaint will be termed the complaint.

Plaintiff pleaded as a cause of action that defendant, by false and fraudulent representations in statements of fact as to the kind, amount, quality and value of the property of Boise King Placers Company (a corporation), induced him to purchase of defendant stock of such company, and joined thirty-one other alleged causes of action, upon as many claims assigned by other persons based upon similar allegations. The demurrer was based upon several grounds, among them, as to each cause of action,—

“1. That the same does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action”;

—that they were barred by the provisions of C. S., secs. 6609, 6610 and 6611; and, as to the whole complaint,—

“2. That thirty-two causes of action have been improperly united in the amended complaint in this, that the causes of action numbered 2 to 32, both inclusive, and each of them, is non-assignable, therefore plaintiff cannot unite the same with his first cause of action.
“3. That there is a defect of parties plaintiff in this, that the said causes of action numbered 2 to 32, both inclusive, *70 are non-assignable, and therefore plaintiff is not the real party in interest and his assignors (naming them) are necessary parties plaintiff.....
“7. That said 32 causes of action, and each of them, are ambiguous in this, that it cannot be determined therefrom where defendant has actually resided since the- day of March, 1914, or whether, since she departed from the State of Idaho and became a resident of and domiciled in the State of California, she has been continuously absent or absent from the State of Idaho, or during what part of said period she has not been a resident of the State of Idaho.
“8. That said 32 causes of action, and each of them, are uncertain for the same reason,” and (9) “are unintelligible for the same reason.”

A motion was made to strike the assigned causes on the ground that (3) they “are ex delicto, and therefore nonassignable.”

The court minutes recite an order sustaining the demurrer upon the grounds alleged in “paragraphs 2 and 3” and “7, 8 and 9,” and—

“The balance of said demurrers with the exception of those paragraphs urging that the first cause of action is barred by the statute of limitation because of the absence of the defendant from the State is denied and overruled.
“Paragraph 3 of motions to strike are sustained.”

The effect of the ruling was that, under subdivision 2 of the demurrer, the causes of action are nonassignable and “therefore” improperly united, and under subdivision 3, that because nonassignable, there is a defect of parties plaintiff, and plaintiff is not the real party in interest, “and his assignors .... are necessary parties plaintiff.”

Except in a few instances which we need not consider, causes of action are joined or improperly united according as they do or do not fall all in one or another of the classes or under the provisions of C. S., see. 6688. Their assignability is not, however, a test of the right to unite or join them in one complaint. A complaint which seeks to state a cause of action upon an assigned claim *71 which is not assignable, is not subject to a demurrer for “lack of capacity to sue,” nor where two or more such claims are joined, is the complaint subject to demurrer for causes improperly united because nonassignable, nor to a demurrer for defect of parties plaintiff. That one is not the “real party in interest” is not ground for demurrer for “defect of parties plaintiff,” but may be raised by demurrer for “failure to state a cause of action.” (20 Cal. Jur. 566.) It is not sufficient that the complaint states a cause of action in someone, — it must be in the plaintiff. (Dixon v. Gries, 106 Cal. 506, 39 Pac. 857.)

As between an assignor and assignee on a completed assignment, the assignee is the real party in interest. (Brumback & Cahalan v. J. B. Oldham & Co., 1 Ida. 709.) The usual remedy on a demurrer for defect of parties plaintiff is to bring in the necessary parties plaintiff. A proper plaintiff need not always be brought in unless he is also a necessary plaintiff.

The demurrer admits the assignment, in which ease the assignee is the real party in interest (Brumback & Cahalan v. J. B. Oldham & Co., supra), and the assignor is neither a necessary nor, in this case, a proper party. Surely, respondents would not contend that each one of the thirty-one assignors should be, or could be, brought in and joined herein, or that they could join in such an action. The interest of each is, if any, only in his particular claim. (27 C. J. 27, n. 37.)

No “legal capacity to sue” is distinct from a failure to show a right of action in the plaintiff. (Anthes v. Anthes, 21 Ida. 305, 121 Pac. 553; Pratt v. Northern Pacific Express Co., 13 Ida. 373, 121 Am. St. 268, 90 Pac. 341; 10 L. R. A., N. S., 499; Los Angeles Ry. Co. v. Davies, 146 Cal. 179, 106 Am. St. 20, 79 Pac. 865; 21 Cal. Jur., p. 99, sec. 64, p. 108, sec. 69.)

The existence of a defense, apparent on the face of the complaint, which will defeat plaintiff’s present right to recover, such as the nonassignability of the claim, is ground *72 for demurrer for failure to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. (21 Cal. Jur., p. 106, sec. 68.)

The complaint having alleged fraud to have been committed between July 24, 1912, and March 23, 1915, and that the plaintiff did not learn that these statements and representations were false until in or about the month of November, 1919, that paragraph which sought to avoid the limitation of C. S., sec. 6611, and to which the demurrer for ambiguity as well as uncertainty and unintelligibility was sustained, was necessary, if at all, to give plaintiff the benefit of the provisions of C. S., sec. 6622, in tolling the statute of limitations during the time defendant was “out of the state,” or of her “absence” after the cause of action accrued.

The complaint alleged:

“That on or about the - day of March, 1914, and prior to the discovery of the said fraud by said plaintiff and prior to the filing of this action herein, said defendant departed from the State of Idaho and ever since said-day of March, 1914, has been and now is a nonresident of the State of Idaho, and is and has ever since said time been a resident of and domiciled in the State of California.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 P. 254, 43 Idaho 64, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macleod-v-stelle-idaho-1926.