Smeland v. Renwick

196 P. 283, 50 Cal. App. 565, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 1
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2197.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 196 P. 283 (Smeland v. Renwick) 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
Smeland v. Renwick, 196 P. 283, 50 Cal. App. 565, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 1 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment entered upon an order granting a nonsuit upon a motion made immediately upon the close of plaintiff’s case.

The defendants, with the exception of defendant Frank V. Smith, were directors of a corporation designated and known as the “San Joaquin Valley Electric Railway,” which was incorporated on October 3, 1908, under the laws of this state and remained in existence as such until March 1, 1913, when, according to the complaint, its charter was duly declared forfeited because of its failure to pay its corporate license tax, as required by law, for the year 1912. The defendant, Smith, was secretary of said, corporation.

*567 The object of said corporation was, so the complaint states, to build and operate a railroad from the city of Stockton, in San Joaquin County, to the city of Modesto, in Stanislaus County.

The purpose of the action is to recover from said defendants damages in the aggregate sum of thirteen thousand four hundred dollars for obtaining from the plaintiff certain real property of the alleged value of eleven thousand four hundred dollars in consideration of certain mortgage bonds and common and preferred stock of said corporation upon alleged false and fraudulent representations by said defendants with regard to conditions then existing as to said corporation and the progress it had made in the construction of the road, the securing of a franchise, the securing of a lease from another railroad company, and the sale of sufficient bonds of said corporation to enable it from the proceeds of such sale to fully furnish and equip its said railroad from Stockton to Modesto.

The defendants Salmon, Rothenbush, Latía, and McCormick filed’ answers to the complaint, putting in issue all the material allegations thereof. The defendant Renwick also filed an answer, but did not appear at the trial. Brackett, Covert, and Smith, the other defendants, were not served with process, and did not appear.

The trial court excluded on objection and struck out on motion certain testimony proposed and presented by the plaintiff, and the action of the court in doing so as well as its order granting the nonsuit constitute the bases of the complaint urged on this appeal against the legal stability of the judgment.

The solution of the question whether there is just legal ground for complaint against the rulings above referred to is contingent upon the determination of the nature, technically, of the action, as to which proposition the parties are in controversy and entertain and advance on this appeal variant views.

The defendants contend, and upon that theory the case was tried by the court below, that the action is based upon section 316 of the Civil Code, which reads as follows: “Any officer of a corporation who willfully gives a certificate, or willfully makes an official report, public *568 notice,- or entry in any of the records or hooks of the corporation, concerning the corporation or its business, which is false in any material representation, shall be liable for all the damages resulting therefrom to any person injured thereby, and if two or more officers unite or participate in the commission of any of the acts herein designated, they shall be jointly and severally liable.”

The plaintiff vigorously urges here that the complaint states both a cause of action founded on the above statute and a cause of action for fraud and deceit. (Civ. Code, sec. 1572.)

[1] We doubt not that it must be held that the action is based entirely on the statute. The very language of the complaint, it seems to us, admits of no other conclusion. It is true that the complaint contains, as we shall presently see, a few statements which might be taken as an attempt to state a common law action to recover for fraud and deceit, but that pleading wholly fails to measure up to the requirements for the statement of such a cause of action.

The charging words of the complaint are as follows: “. . . that on and prior to the said 30th day of January, 1912, the said defendants, as such officers and directors of said corporation, willfully gave and published written certificates, and willfully made and published official printed reports and public printed notices concerning the aforesaid railway corporation, its business, financial standing, and assets, which were false and untrue in the following material respects, namely: That on and prior to the said 30th day of January, 1912, the said defendants, as such officers and directors of said corporation, falsely represented and stated to plaintiff verbally and by means of said printed certificates, officially printed reports and printed public notices, to which their names as such officers were appended, attached and printed, that the said railway corporation had sold mortgage bonds of said corporation to the amount of six hundred and twenty thousand dollars, and that the proceeds of such sale were sufficient to finish and fully equip its said railroad from Stockton to Modesto, which was then only partially graded, and put the same in operation and in a condition whereby *569 it would, and could, earn dividends of 15 per cent on its common stock; when in truth and in fact all said representations, both oral and in said certificates, official reports and public notices, made and issued by said defendants as such officers and directors, were then and there false and untrue. ’ ’

It seems to us that no more fitting language could be employed than the above to state a case of fraud under section 316 of the Civil Code. Indeed, it will be noted that the above language of the complaint is substantially the language of said section. It is, however, .the words italicized in the above excerpt from the complaint, to wit, “falsely represented and stated to plaintiff verbally,” etc., and “when in truth and in fact all said representations, both oral,” etc., which the plaintiff assumes constitute a sufficient predicate for a just contention that he relied upon and pleaded in his complaint both the statutory and the common-law action for fraud, as the cause for the latter action is defined and embodied in section 1572 of the Civil Code. [2] But, to state a common-law action for fraud and deceit, there must be more "in the complaint than the bare statement that the defendants made certain false and fraudulent representations upon which, believing the same, the plaintiff entered into the transaction from which he thus asks to be relieved or as to which he seeks any appropriate legal or equitable relief. It must also be charged not only that the defendant knew that the alleged false representations were false and untrue at the time that they were made, but that they were made with the intent to deceive and defraud the plaintiff. This rule in such cases is so well and thoroughly settled that it is axiomatic in. the law. Indeed, the rule must necessarily be so, for it is not inconceivable—in fact, it has often been found to be true—that one may honestly and in good faith, and with no intent to deceive or commit thereby a fraud upon another, make statements or representations in regal’d to a certain matter which are subsequently discovered to be untrue.

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Bluebook (online)
196 P. 283, 50 Cal. App. 565, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smeland-v-renwick-calctapp-1920.