Ohio Electric Car Co. v. Le Sage

188 P. 982, 182 Cal. 450, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 533
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 5285.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 188 P. 982 (Ohio Electric Car Co. v. Le Sage) 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
Ohio Electric Car Co. v. Le Sage, 188 P. 982, 182 Cal. 450, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 533 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

—The defendant Le Sage appeals on the judgment-roll alone from a judgment against .him. His only point is that the complaint does not state a cause of action against him.

' The plaintiff contends that the appellant cannot raise this point because the demurrer to the complaint was a joint demurrer in behalf of all the defendants and that as the complaint is conceded to be good as against some of the defendants, it must be held good as to all of them upon a joint demurrer. In Asevado v. Orr, 100 Cal. 300, [34 Pac. 777], the court said that “a joint demurrer by all of the defendants must be overruled if thp complaint is good against either of them.” We need not attempt to explain this remark or to show that it is inapplicable to the present case. It is immaterial whether the point was properly raised by the demurrer or not. [1] The objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action is not waived by the failure to demur, but may be raised for the first time upon appeal. (Code Civ. Proc., see. 434; Arnold v. American Ins. Co., 148 Cal. 663, [84 Pac. 182]; Lyden v. Spohn-Patrick Co., 155 Cal. 177, [100 Pac. 236].) [2] It is true that where the objection is not made until after judgment, the complaint will be liberally construed, and if the necessary facts appear by implication only, or as a conclusion' of law, the complaint will be upheld: But where there is an entire absence of an essential allegation, the complaint will be held bad, even when the point is first raised upon appeal.

The complaint here contains five counts. Upon the fifth count judgment was given in favor of the defendants and *453 it need not be further considered. So far as the defendant Le Sage is concerned, the action is based upon a guaranty by him and Buffet attached to a contract executed by the defendants Macintosh and Macintosh under the name of Washington Street Electric Garage Company. We will hereafter refer to them as the Garage Company. The contract between the plaintiff and the Garage Company provided that the Garage Company should have the exclusive right, in the city of Los Angeles," to sell electric automobiles manufactured by the plaintiff. It also provided that the plaintiff would sell such automobiles to said Garage Company at a discount from the list price and upon specified terms of payment. Attached thereto, after the signature of the said partners, was the guaranty signed by Le Sage and Buffet upon which Le Sage is sought to be held liable, which was in the following words:

“Whereas—We are interested in the Washington Street Electric Garage Co. and at our request the Ohio Electric Car Co. has consented to deliver certain automobiles to the said Washington Street Electric Garage Co., without payment therefor in cash, and that the said Ohio Electric Car Co. has further, at our request, entered into the foregoing contract with the Washington Street Electric Garage Co., we hereby guarantee to hold the Ohio Electric Car Co. whole and harmless from any and all loss or damage by reason of any transaction or transactions between it and the Washington Street Electric Garage Co.”

The complaint alleges that certain automobiles were purchased by the Garage Company from the plaintiff at specified prices upon which partial payments had been made. The allegations of nonpayment were in the same phraseology in each count. It will be sufficient to quote the clause of the first count upon that subject:

“That no part of said $1,928.70 or of the interest thereon has been paid to the plaintiff and there is now due and owing to it thereon, from said defendants, E. B. Macintosh, R. B. Macintosh, Geo. E. P. Buffet and Gideon Le Sage, said sum of $1,928.70, with interest thereon at six per cent per annum from the fourteenth day of July, 1915.”

[3] There is no allegation that the plaintiff has suffered any loss or damage by reason of any transaction with the Garage Company, or that the plaintiff has taken any legal *454 proceedings to collect from said company indemnities alleged to be due it, or that said company is insolvent, or .that for any other.- reason legal proceedings against them would be unavailing. No facts are alleged to indicate that the debts of the Garage Company could not have been enforced by ordinary legal proceedings. The appellant contends that the complaint is insufficient against him because of the want of such allegations and we think this contention must be sustained.

The appellant’s only liability is upon the guaranty signed by him. [4] The language of the guaranty is to receive a fair and. reasonable interpretation upon the same rules of construction that are applicable to other written instruments, but the liability of the guarantor cannot be extended by implication beyond the terms of the guaranty when so construed. (London and San Francisco Bank v. Parrott, 125 Cal. 482, [73 Am. St. Rep. 64, 58 Pac. 164].) The guaranty of Le Sage is not an unconditional guaranty, as described in section 2806 of the Civil Code, and hence it does not come within the rule of section 2807 that “a guarantor of payment or performance is liable to the guarantee immediately upon the default of the principal, and without demand or notice.” The guaranty clearly imports a condition, that is, that the plaintiff must suffer some loss or damage from the transactions guaranteed, in order to make the guaranty operative. [5] It is, in effect, a guaranty of collection such as that mentioned in section 2800 of the Civil Code. Such a guaranty imports that the debtor is solvent and that the demand is collectible by the usual legal proceedings, if taken with reasonable diligence. If such proceedings are not taken, the guarantor is discharged unless “no part of the debt could have been collected thereby” or unless the principal obligor has removed from the state leaving no property therein from which the obligation might be sa-tisfied., (Civ. Code, sees. 2801, 2802.) The complaint does not show any of these facts, or any excuse for the failure to take legal proceedings first against the principal. The rule in regard to such guaranty* is well stated in Pierce v. Merrill, 128 Cal. 471, [79 Am. St. Rep. 63, 61 Pac. 67], in a quotation from Burton v. Dewey, 4 Kan. App. 589, [46 Pac. 325], as follows: [6] “There is a well-understood difference between a guaranty of payment, and a contract of *455 indemnity against loss as the result of the nonpayment of a debt. In the first case the liability of the guarantor is fixed by the failure of the principal debtor to pay at maturity, or at the time when payment was guaranteed. In the second, the contract partakes of the nature of a guaranty of collection, no liability being incurred until after, by the use of due and reasonable diligence, the guarantee has become unable to collect the debt from the principal debtor.”

In Fernandez v. Tormey, 121 Cal. 515, [53 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
188 P. 982, 182 Cal. 450, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-electric-car-co-v-le-sage-cal-1920.