Neale v. Head

65 P. 131, 133 Cal. 42, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 859
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1901
DocketS.F. No. 2172.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 65 P. 131 (Neale v. Head) 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
Neale v. Head, 65 P. 131, 133 Cal. 42, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 859 (Cal. 1901).

Opinions

VAN DYKE, J.

The appeal is taken from the judgment and also from the order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The action was brought in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, by one Joseph E. Shain, for whom the present plaintiff was substituted as plaintiff at the trial. The action is founded upon a promissory note of the defendant, constituting one of the so-called guaranty notes, of which the following is a copy:-—

“ Office of the California Mutual Life Insurance Company. “$5,000. San Francisco, Jan. 6,1868. “ Five days after actual demand, for value received, I promise to pay to the order of the California Mutual Life Insurance Company the sum of five thousand dollars, in United States gold coin, with interest at the then legal rate from and after such demand. A. E. Head.”

The case was heard in the court below on the second amended complaint, filed by the original plaintiff, and the answer thereto, and the supplemental complaint, substituting the present plaintiff.

The California Mutual Life Insurance Company was incorporated in the year 1867, under an act of the legislature of this state, entitled “ An act to provide for incorporation of mutual insurance companies for the insurance of life and health and against accident. Approved April 2, 1866.” (Stats. 1865-66, p. 752.) After obtaining the guaranty fund as provided by said act, the said insurance company engaged in business, and carried on the same during the years 1868, 1869, 1870, 1871, *44 and 1872. In the year 1873 it sold out its business to the Republic Life Insurance Company of Chicago, an Illinois corporation, and ceased to do further business. In 1885, said insurance company being insolvent, proceedings in involuntary insolvency were, on the 7th of March of that year, commenced against it, and thereafter it was adjudicated insolvent, and the court decreed, among other things, that the assets of the insolvent, including the notes constituting the guaranty fund, should be sold, and in pursuance of said decree said notes were, by the assignee, sold; the note of the defendant being sold to one James H. Dobinson for three hundred dollars, who, as alleged in the second amended complaint, transferred and assigned the same to the original plaintiff; and, September 22,1888, on demand being made on defendant, and refusal to pay, the action was commenced in 1891; and the original plaintiff, before the trial, transferred the claim to the present plaintiff. By the act under which the company was organized and operating, a guaranty fund of not less than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars is required, which “ shall consist of the notes of solvent parties, approved by the board of directors and by each other,” which notes so given by any one person should not exceed the sum of five thousand dollars, exclusive of interest. It is also provided that when the fixed capital of the company shall have been obtained, a sworn declaration of the amount and nature of the same shall be filed with the original certificate of incorporation, and “ until such time no guaranty note shall be withdrawn from the fund, unless another note of equal solvency shall be substituted therefor, and unless with the unanimous approval of the board of directors then in office, and of all of the other parties liable on the rest of the notes comprising the guaranty fund.” In this case there were fifty notes of five thousand dollars each. There is no averment in the complaint of compliance with any of these requirements. The contrary, however, is expressly alleged in defendant’s answer, and the findings substantially support the allegations of the answer. The findings show that five of the guaranty notes were, during the existence of the company, surrendered to the makers of the same, and withdrawn from the said guaranty fund, without any substitution or attempt at substitution of other securities, and without the knowledge, approval, or consent of the defendant. It is also found that eight of the makers of said guaranty notes had died, and had left solvent *45 estates sufficient to pay their respective notes and other debts, and that the company neglected and failed to present any claim whatever against the estate of said deceased solvent note-makers, or to take any steps whatever for the collection of the same, until the same had become barred by limitation; that said company, without the approval, consent, or knowledge of the defendant, transmitted all of said notes constituting said guaranty fund, including the note in suit, to the Republic Life Insurance Company, a corporation existing under the laws of the state of Illinois, without substituting or procuring to be substituted therefor any note, money, or property whatever; that, after the commencement of this action, and without defendant’s approval or consent, said company surrendered to the makers thereof thirty-two of said notes, constituting said guaranty fund, without any substitution of other notes or security, other than the execution of a bond in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, in favor of the assignee in insolvency.

The appellant contends,—1. That, having made the note in suit on certain conditions, he is not hable, because the conditions have not heen complied with; and, being a guarantor, is discharged from liability, in consequence of the acts and transactions referred to as having been found by the trial court; 2. That the claim, if any ever accrued, is barred by limitation.

1. The note in suit, as already shown, was given in pursuance of and in accordance with the provisions of the statute of 1866. Among the other provisions of that act, it is declared that such notes, or the proceeds thereof, should remain with the company, and should not be withdrawn from the guaranty fund without substituting therefor another note of equal solvency, nor without unanimous approval of the board of directors, and all of the other parties liable on the rest of the notes. These provisions of the law must be considered as having been written into the note, and they are in harmony with the general rules of law for the protection of a surety or guarantor. Each note-maker had the right to require that there should be, in all, fifty solvent note-makers, each of the sum of five thousand dollars, and it was also his right to have that number of such solvent note-makers continue, subject to the same conditions and liabilities as himself. The reason of this provision in the law is very obvious. The corporation and its stockholders are primarily liable for the company’s debts. *46 (Morrow v. Superior Court, 64 Cal. 383.) The parties who executed the guaranty notes are the mere sureties of the company and its stockholders for the payment of the company’s debts (In re California Mut. Life Ins. Co., 81 Cal. 364); and, as sureties, each note-maker, if required to pay in discharge of the company’s debts, is entitled to contribution from such note-makers as may not have paid an equal amount. As a guarantor, the defendant is entitled to stand upon the very letter of his contract. (Brandt on Suretyship, 2d ed., secs. 93, 254; Miller v. Steward, 9 Wheat. 680, 702, 703; Tomlinson v. Simpson, 33 Minn. 443, 446; Independent District v. Reichard, 50 Iowa, 98.)

It was held in In re California Mut.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 P. 131, 133 Cal. 42, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neale-v-head-cal-1901.