Neale v. Morrow

88 P. 815, 150 Cal. 414, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 531
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1907
DocketS.F. No. 4008.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 P. 815 (Neale v. Morrow) 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. Morrow, 88 P. 815, 150 Cal. 414, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 531 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This is an appeal, from a- judgment entered in favor of defendant after an order sustaining a demurrer to the complaint was entered.

The action is founded on a promissory note made by A. E. Head, against whom the action was originally commenced, but who having thereafter died, the respondent, as his administrator, was substituted as defendant.

It appears from the allegations of the complaint, necessary to be stated in order to discuss the point involved on this ap *416 peal, that said note was executed by said A. E. Head on January 6, 1868, and is as follows:—

“Office of the California Mutual Life Insurance Co. “$5,000 San Francisco, January 6th, 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 U. S. gold coin, with interest at the then legal rate from and after such demand. A. E. Head.”

That upon its execution said note was delivered to the said California Mutual Life Insurance Company; that said California Mutual Life Insurance Company was incorporated in the year 1867 under an act of the legislature of the state of California entitled “An act to provide for the incorporation of mutual insurance companies for the insurance of life and health and against accidents,” approved April 2, 1866; that in pursuance of the requirements of sections 8 and 9 of said act, the company had a capital stock fully paid up in cash of one hundred thousand dollars, and it also had a guarantee fund of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, consisting of fifty promissory notes of solvent persons for five thousand dollars each, payable in five days after actual demand, to said company or its order; that said A. E. Head was one of such note-makers, and the note herein sued on was one of such guarantee notes; that all said notes were executed and delivered in pursuance to the provisions of said act; that after obtaining said guarantee fund the company commenced to prosecute the business of life insurance; that the net earnings of the company never accumulated in cash or securities in which the net earnings were invested to the sum of three hundred and fifty thousand dollars; that said company made no profits and never acquired any net earnings over the amount required for paying and providing for its expenses, losses, and liabilities; that said guarantee fund never became discharged of its obligations; that in 1885 said life-insurance company was declared insolvent, and upon proceedings had to that end it was by the court decreed, among other things, that said note of A. E. Head was an asset of said insolvent company, and directed it to be sold; that pursuant to said decree said note was sold to J. H. Dobinspn, the agent of a syndicate of guarantee note-makers who co *417 operated together to provide means to wind up said insurance company and liquidate its indebtedness; that said note of said Head was under direction of said syndicate transferred to the executors of the estate of one .James Laidley, deceased, in settlement and extinguishment of a claim of eight thousand four hundred dollars against the said insolvent corporation by the estate of said Laidley arising out of a policy of ten thousand dollars issued by said insurance company payable on the death of said Laidley; that on the twenty-second day of September, 1888, payment of said note was actually demanded of said Head by the executors of said estate, and upon his refusal to pay this action was commenced September 28, 1888, and is now being prosecuted in behalf of said estate.

The defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that the cause of action of said note was barred by the statute of limitations. The demurrer was sustained by the superior court, and the validity of said order is the only point presented on this appeal from the judgment.

This case was here on appeal before—Neale v. Head, 133 Cal. 42, [65 Pac. 131, 576]—after trial and judgment for the plaintiff. On that appeal it was urged, among other grounds for reversal, that the claim upon said note was barred by the statute of limitations, but the case being reversed on other grounds no disposition of that point was made. It is claimed by respondent in support of the ruling of the lower court that the general rule is, where a demand is necessary to perfect a right of action upon a promissory note payable on demand, and to set the statute of limitations in motion, that such demand must be made within a reasonable time, which in no event can exceed the statute of limitations provided for bringing said action after the cause of action has accrued, and that if such demand is delayed beyond that period the right of action is forever barred. And applying the rule to the note at bar, it is insisted that as such note provided for payment “after demand” such demand should have been made within the four-year period of limitation, and not having been so made the cause of action upon the note was barred when the complaint in this action was filed sixteen years after the latest period for making such demand existed. Conceding this to be the general rule, it has only been applied in cases where the notes in question have been made payable *418 at a given period “after demand.” We have been pointed to no authority which has held that this rule is applicable to notes payable within a certain period “after actual demand.” In fact, our attention has not been directed to any case where the language used in the note before us has ever come up for consideration or interpretation. The general rule of limitations asserted by respondent as applicable to the note at liar is formulated by the decisions supporting it in cases where a note is payable so many days “after demand,” upon a presumption from.lapse of time that a demand was made. But certainly as a matter of simple contract the maker of a note could contract so that the maturity of his note payable so many days after demand should not be determined by presumption of law that a demand was made, but that it should only mature after actual demand—a demand in fact as contradistinguished from a presumptive one. And that this was the intention of the parties we think is apparent not only from the language used in the note, but from the situation of the contracting parties and the circumstances attending its making and delivery. It is a cardinal rule that in the interpretation of a contract every word used therein is to be given its full meaning and effect. And in the construction of a written instrument, in order to ascertain what was meant by the language used, the object in view and the circumstances surrounding the execution of the instrument are properly to be taken into consideration for that purpose.

Now, considering the situation and circumstances under which this note was executed. It was one of a number required to be given to the California Mutual Life Insurance Company in order to constitute a guarantee fund as required by the act under which- the company was organized. It was given pursuant to the terms of the act, and the provisions of the act, in as far as they bear upon such note, must be considered as written into the note itself. (Neale v. Head, 133 Cal. 43-45, [65 Pac. 131, 576].)

Referring now to such provisidns.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P. 815, 150 Cal. 414, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neale-v-morrow-cal-1907.