Robinson v. Godfrey

248 P. 268, 78 Cal. App. 284, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 212
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 1926
DocketDocket No. 4585.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 248 P. 268 (Robinson v. Godfrey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Godfrey, 248 P. 268, 78 Cal. App. 284, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 212 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

Appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of defendants on the failure of plaintiff to amend his complaint after demurrer sustained thereto.

The complaint as set forth in the record on appeal covers approximately thirty pages, and while it is mechanically divided into nine paragraphs, the story of the pleader consists in allegations more or less appropriate to several different causes of action without a proper or any attempt being made to separately state them. There are first set forth facts which, with the addition of certain other facts, might form the basis for a suit in. equity on several different counts by plaintiff as a stockholder of a corporation against certain defendants for alleged fraud committed by them as officers in the management of the business of the corporation; secondly, purported causes of action in partnership accounting are attempted to be alleged as against defendant Godfrey only: and, thirdly, a similar cause of action as against defendants Godfrey and Warner. One of the named defendants is wholly disconnected from any of the allegations of the complaint other than that such defendant is alleged to be the wife of one of the other defendants.

Each of defendants James J. Godfrey and Cecille Eyre Godfrey demurred separately to the complaint, but each of such demurrers is identical with the other as to the several objections to the complaint. In brief, they are that the complaint does not state a cause of action; that in several specified particulars there is a misjoinder of parties defendant; that in the manner designated in the demurrer several causes of action have been improperly united; that several causes of action are not separately stated; that in each of fourteen specified particulars the complaint is uncertain; likewise, unintelligible; likewise ambiguous, and that as appears on the face of the complaint, the action is barred by each of the provisions of sections 337, 338, 339, and 343 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

*286 The complaint is notable with reference to the wealth of detail and evidentiary matter therein contained, but singularly lacking in allegations of ultimate fact. If (without so deciding) by some liberality of construction it may be conceded that as to any of the several causes of action which are apparently attempted to be stated, the essential allegations are present, the remaining issues suggested by the demurrer require consideration. As to the objection to the complaint that it contains a misjoinder of parties, on an examination thereof it becomes apparent that if the intention of the pleader was to confine his cause of action to an accounting between or among partners, the array of facts regarding the activities of the corporation defendant, or of the alleged fraud of defendant Godfrey, was at least unnecessary; and the joinder in such action of the wife of one of the defendants with no allegations in the complaint showing any pecuniary interest in her in the • settlement of the controversy, was a pure gratuity. No ultimate fact is averred which would indicate the propriety of the joinder in the action for an accounting between or among partners of either the corporation defendant or the wife of one of the defendants. In the prayer of the complaint plaintiff asks for various forms of relief, including the following: “For all the relief to which this plaintiff may show himself entitled as an individual under said partnership agreement, and ■as a stockholder in the defendant’s corporation, and for all the relief, both legal and equitable, to - which this plaintiff may show himself entitled thereunder, ...”

While it may be surmised that the “motif” of the pleader was accounting in a partnership, the injection into the complaint of such a vast quantity of matter regarding the alleged fraudulent acts of certain of the defendants as affecting the legal rights of the corporation, with consequent damage thereto, as well as the rights of plaintiff as a stockholder of such corporation, renders an accurate determination of the nature of the action somewhat difficult. If by some stretch of the rules of pleading the complaint be considered as legally stating a cause of action for fraud by a stockholder of a corporation against certain of its officers, with the addition to the complaint of certain allegations of ultimate fact, it is conceivable that the corporation would be a proper or even necessary party defendant. But *287 by assuming that which was apparently intended, and is indicated by the brief filed for appellant, to wit, thi complaint states both a cause of action for an accou^„^& between or among partners and a cause of action for fraud by a stockholder of the corporation against certain of its managing officers, the question arises as to whether such causes of action have been properly united. The authority for such a joinder which is suggested by counsel herein is found in section 427 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by which, in substance, it is provided that a plaintiff may unite several causes of action in the same complaint where the plaintiff’s claims arise “out of the same transaction, or transactions connected with the same subject of action, and not included within one of the foregoing subdivisions of this section. The causes of action so united must all belong to one only of these classes, and must affect all the parties to the action, and not require different places of trial, and must be separately stated; ...”

While it is possible that a suit for an accounting, as well as one for fraud, is provided for by one or more of “the foregoing subdivisions” of section 427 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the difficulty of joining such actions in the complaint herein is that the statute provides that in order to be so united they must “belong to one only of the classes” mentioned therein, and that they “must affect all the parties to the action, . . . and must be separately stated; . . . ” It is clear that the complaint under consideration fails to qualify at least as to two of such requirements in that the two actions do not “affect all the parties to the action”; nor are such suits separately stated—each of which objections, as heretofore noted, being one of the grounds of demurrer interposed by the defendants herein.

In addition to the foregoing reasons which justified the ruling of the judge of the lower court in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint, the pleading is vulnerable on each of several of the fourteen objections specified in the demurrer for its uncertainty, which in the main include the problem of whether the action is one for an accounting, or one for fraud; and if for an accounting, what conditions which were properly averable as ultimate facts were present both at the time of the formation of the partnership and at the time of the commencement of the action, and as to the *288 latter, particularly with reference to .the alleged unsettled accounts of the partnership.

It appearing that the complaint was objectionable upon each of several grounds stated in the demurrer, and such demurrer having been generally sustained, with leave to amend the complaint being granted, it became and wras the duty of plaintiff either to amend the complaint in such manner as would correct the defects pointed out in the demurrer, or to stand upon his original pleading.

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 268, 78 Cal. App. 284, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-godfrey-calctapp-1926.