Peeples v. Hayes

104 P.2d 305, 4 Wash. 2d 253, 1940 Wash. LEXIS 489
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1940
DocketNo. 27694.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 104 P.2d 305 (Peeples v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peeples v. Hayes, 104 P.2d 305, 4 Wash. 2d 253, 1940 Wash. LEXIS 489 (Wash. 1940).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

This action was brought in the superior court by the receiver of the Sand Point Golf Club, a corporation, to set aside certain transfers of personal property made by that corporation to the defendants, on the ground of unlawful preference. The preferences were alleged to have been given on or about October 27, 1930, and March 14, 1933. The superior court held that there was an unlawful preference given on the latter date, but that the action is barred by the statute of limitations.

The appellant states in his brief that the appeal presents the following questions:

“(a) Is appellant’s action barred by the statute of limitations?
“ (b) If appellant’s action is not barred by the statute of limitations, may appellant recover the whole sum of $10,000 with interest from the respondents (that being the value of the chattels illegally transferred to respondents) or are the respondents entitled *255 to have offset against said $10,000 the deductions allowed them by the trial court in finding No. VI?”

As we have come to the conclusion that question (a) must be answered in the affirmative, it will not be necessary to trace or set out in detail the complicated series of transactions between the parties. For our present purpose, it is only necessary to know (1) that the defendants secured an unlawful preference from the golf club on March 14, 1933; (2) that an application for the appointment of a receiver for the corporation was filed on September 17, 1937; (3) that the plaintiff was in due course appointed as receiver and served and filed his complaint in the action during the following February, within six months of the date of application; (4) that all claims allowed by the receiver were in existence when the unlawful preference was made; and (5) that none of them had been reduced to judgment at the time this action was commenced. To this may be added that subsequent discovery of concealed fraud is not relied on, or at least cannot properly be relied on, to toll the limitation period which may be found applicable.

A formal bill of sale carrying out the transaction of March 14, 1933, was filed on the succeeding May 5th. It is possible, and perhaps probable, that the creditors of the corporation, or at least some of them, did not know of the transfer; but it is well settled that mere ignorance of a cause of action does not toll the statute of limitations. Cornell v. Edsen, 78 Wash. 662, 139 Pac. 602, 51 L. R. A. (N. S.) 279; Shaw v. Rogers & Rogers, 117 Wash. 161, 200 Pac. 1090.

The appellant’s first contention is that the time to bring a suit to recover an unlawful preference is not limited by any statute other than Rem. Rev. Stat., § 5831-1 [P. C. §4532-1], Laws of 1931, chapter 47, *256 p. 160, § 1, and his second is that, in any event, such an action as this does not accrue until the receiver is appointed.

In setting up our limitation system, the legislature provided a limitation for every kind of action which can be brought in our courts, except, of course, those actions brought to enforce some right of the sovereign. This is the holding in Reeves v. Davis & Co., 164 Wash. 287, 290, 2 P. (2d) 732, and of a number of prior decisions therein cited. No other conclusion was, or is, possible. From the earliest territorial days, our statutes have contained the provision now appearing in Rem. Rev. Stat., Title II, chapter 3, entitled: “Limitation of Actions,” as § 165 [P. C. § 8172]. This section reads as follows:

“An action for relief not hereinbefore provided for shall be commenced within two years after the cause of action shall have accrued.”

Appellant contends, however, that the limitation provided in § 5831-1 is exclusive and provides the only applicable period. This section reads as follows:

“Actions in the courts of this state by a trustee, receiver or other liquidating officer of an insolvent corporation, to recover a preference as herein defined may be commenced at any time within six months from the time of the filing of the application for the appointment of such trustee, receiver or other liquidating officer.”

If this be the only limitation upon such an action, the easily possible consequences are somewhat startling. If there be no other limitation, a transfer made during a period of insolvency, ten, twenty, or thirty, or any number of years before, may be set aside as a preference if a receiver brings suit within six months after the application for his appointment is made, and no creditor of a corporation who receives payment of *257 his claim in money or property can rest assured that he may not be called upon, in the far distant future, to refund the payment.

The fact that statutes of limitation, properly so-called, are statutes of repose, enacted to prevent just such consequences as these, at once suggests that § 5381-1 was not intended to operate as a statute of limitation, in the sense the word “limitation” is used in chapter 3, Title II, Remington’s Revised Statutes. 'We have, in fact, so held in Morris v. Orcas Lime Co., 185 Wash. 126, 53 P. (2d) 604. In speaking of the limitation provided in § 5831-1, the court said:

“The limitation is not one that goes to the remedy of a defendant, like the ordinary statute of limitation, but it goes to the cause of action or right to sue. The time prescribed — six months from the time of filing the application for appointment of the trustee for the commencement of the action — is a condition to the enforcement of the liability or the trustee’s right of recovery, an element in the right itself. The right falls with the failure to commence the action within the allotted time.”

The ordinary statute of limitation is enacted for the benefit of those against whom claims are made; that is, for the benefit of defendants. It in no way affects the plaintiff’s right, and gives the defendant a privilege only, which privilege may be exercised or waived at defendant’s option. On the other hand, the limitation provided by § 5831-1 is a condition of the plaintiff’s asserted right, and the absence of allegations showing that the action has been commenced within the period limited renders his complaint demurrable for want of facts.

Furthermore, the limitation is not for the benefit of those against whom actions are brought, but it is primarily for the benefit of the creditors of the insolvent *258 corporation on whose behalf the action is prosecuted. Its primary purpose is to insure that their rights in the trust fund will be enforced promptly and without unreasonable delay.

When does such an action as this accrue? The appellant receiver contends that, in the very nature of things, it cannot accrue until the receiver has been appointed. It is said, in his brief:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 P.2d 305, 4 Wash. 2d 253, 1940 Wash. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peeples-v-hayes-wash-1940.