Nellis v. Pacific Bank

59 P. 830, 127 Cal. 166, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 618
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1899
DocketS.F. No. 1942.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 59 P. 830 (Nellis v. Pacific Bank) 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
Nellis v. Pacific Bank, 59 P. 830, 127 Cal. 166, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 618 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Plaintiff sues for himself, and as assignee of certain twenty other depositors in defendant bank, to recover from its stockholders upon their statutory liability as such stockholders. Plaintiff had judgment against defendant James M. McDonald upon certain of the causes of action pleaded, but as to the causes of action assigned to plaintiff by Lewis Merrill, B. G. Ruhl & Co. and Annie White, and as to his own claim, the court gave judgment for defendant. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment only as to the assigned claims of Merrill, Ruhl & Co., and White.

The original complaint was filed June 19, 1895, and the amendments were filed May 19, 1897. The court below held the last-mentioned assigned causes of action barred by subdivision 1 of section 338 and section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It is conceded by appellant that if the amendments state a new cause of action the judgment should be affirmed; otherwise all parties agree that it should be reversed. The three *168 years statute of limitations applies to deposits made more than three years before the commencement of the action (Wells v. Black, 117 Cal. 157; 59 Am. St. Rep. 162); and it is settled law that a new cause of action cannot he introduced into a complaint under the guise of an amendment so as to evade the statute. (Atkinson v. Amador etc. Canal Co., 53 Cal. 102; Meeks v. Southern Pac. Co., 61 Cal. 149.) It is equally well settled that if no new cause of action is stated in the amendments to the original complaint, the amendments simply supersede the original by more fully setting forth the cause of action defectively alleged in the original complaint whose identity is in no way affected. (Barter v. Reynolds, 33 Cal. 501; Vanderslice v. Matthews, 79 Cal. 277; Cox v. McLaughlin, 76 Cal. 60; 9 Am. St. Rep. 164.)

The court found that on June 22,’ 1893, the Pacific Bank was indebted to Buhl & Co. in the sum of two thousand two hundred and eighty-six dollars and eighteen cents on account of money deposited with the said bank; that in plaintiff’s original complaint he alleged that Ada P. Buhl on June 22, 1893, deposited in the hank the sum ■ of eleven hundred and forty-three dollars and nine cents, and also that L. Dallman on the same day deposited a like sum, which was within three years from the filing of the original complaint (these two sums equal the deposit made by Buhl & Co.); that on May 19, 1897, plaintiff obtained leave ^to amend his complaint in respect of said two deposits, “on the ground of mistake in the statement of the names in vhich the original deposits were made,” and the amendment was accordingly made “wherein it was alleged that the said Pacific Bank was, on the twenty-second day of June, 1893, indebted to B. G. Buhl & Co. in the sum of two thousand two hundred and eighty-six dollars and eighteen cents for and on account of money delivered to and deposited with said Pacific Bank by said B. G. Buhl & Co. within three years prior to the commencement of this action.” That Buhl & Co. assigned their claim to B. G. Buhl and Minnie Dallman, and Buhl and Dan-man assigned to Ada P. Buhl and she to plaintiff, all prior to the commencement of the action; the court finds “that all of said sum was delivered to and deposited with said Pacific Bank by said B. G. Buhl & Co. prior to June 22, 1893, and more than *169 three years prior to the date of filing of said amendments, and that neither said Minnie Dallman nor said Ada P. Buhl was a member of said firm of B. G. Buhl & Co., but said B. G. Buhl and L. Dallman were members thereof.”

The cause of action as to Annie White is in a similar situation. The court found that on June 22, 1893, the bank was indebted to C. W. Burgess in the sum of four hundred and sixty-three dollars and thirty cents deposited by him within three years prior to the commencement of the action; that when the action was commenced plaintiff alleged in his complaint that on June 22, 1893, the bank was indebted to Annie White in the sum of four hundred and sixty-three dollars and thirty cents, deposited by her within three years prior to the commencement of the action; that on May 19, 1897, plaintiff obtained leave to amend his complaint on the ground of mistake in the statement of the name in which the original deposit was made, and an amendment was filed alleging the indebtedness to Burgess as the depositor and that he had assigned his claim to Annie White and she to plaintiff, both assignments being prior to the commencement of the action. It appears from the findings that the bank failed and closed its doors June 23, 1893, and ever since has refused to pay its depositors.

Appellant claims that he was not called upon to plead the chain of title to this money; that had he alleged the ultimate fact of the indebtedness of the Pacific Bank to him at the commencement of the action, it would have been sufficient; that he erroneously stated that the particular money sought to be recovered was deposited by one of plaintiff’s assignors, rather than another prior assignor, which was but an error in description, and that the description was necessary only to identify the claim sued on and was not necessary in the pleading, for the fact was as alleged that plaintiff was the owner of the claim when the suit was commenced. Furthermore, it is claimed that no injury could have accrued to defendant from this error in description. Bespondent replies that the complaint correctly states each claim as a separate cause of action; that the bank was not indebted to plaintiff on the assigned claims, as himself a depositor, but that the claim of every depositor was a chose in action belonging to him which the depositor alone could assign; that the bank was *170 liable to the depositor in the first place, and defendant, as a stockholder, was liable for his proportion of that particular debt; that the assignee could recover only by proving the particular liability of the bank and that he was owner of the claim, and to prove this he must allege the facts, because the plaintiff must allege every fact that he is required to prove (citing Green v. Palmer, 15 Cal. 411; 76 Am. Dec. 492); that a suit to recover the proportion of the debt due to A will not lie to recover the proportion of the debt to B, for the causes of action are different.

It is true that plaintiff derives his right to sue from the depositor; but it is also true that, before the action was commenced, he obtained the assignment of the real depositor, and in his complaint he correctly described and identified the deposit or indebtedness for which he sued; he failed to state correctly the name of the depositor while correctly stating the name of his assignor, who was not in fact the depositor. The cause of action was the debt owing by the bank, and by the amendment this cause of action was not changed but was identical in point of amount and time when accrued with that stated in the original complaint. That plaintiff made a mistake in describing the person through whom he derived title was not so material as to make the correction by amendment the statement of a new and different cause of action. In Heilbron v. Heinlen, 72 Cal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P. 830, 127 Cal. 166, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nellis-v-pacific-bank-cal-1899.