Swift v. San Francisco Stock & Exchange Board

8 P. 94, 67 Cal. 567, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 696
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1885
DocketNo. 8773
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 8 P. 94 (Swift v. San Francisco Stock & Exchange Board) 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
Swift v. San Francisco Stock & Exchange Board, 8 P. 94, 67 Cal. 567, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 696 (Cal. 1885).

Opinions

McKee, J.

The San Francisco Stock and Exchange Board is a voluntary unincorporated association composed of one hundred persons, who under that name have combined for the purpose of facilitating the purchase and sale of stocks by its members. For that purpose the originators of the association organized in the year 1862 by subscribing to a body of rules, regulations, and provisions contained in articles of agreement in writing, which they adopted as the constitution and by-laws of the association.

Article xxii. of the constitution adopted by them contains the following provisions:—

TRUST FUND COMMITTEE.
“There shall, at all times, exist in this board a committee composed of at least three members or more, at the discretion of the board, to be known as the Trust Fund Committee.

[568]*568It shall be the duty of such committee to take charge of all moneys which may come into their hands, by direction and vote of the board, and invest the same according to their best discretion and judgment; said moneys, and the increase of the same under such investments, to constitute a trust fund, to be used and applied by such committee in the following manner, viz.:—

Upon the death of a member of the board said Trust Fund Committee shall pay from the increase in their hands, from investment of said moneys, to such person or persons, object or objects, as may have been designated in writing by such deceased member, the sum of $10,000 in United States gold coin. In case there be no such written disposition made, then to the widow of such deceased member, the sum of $10,000 in United States gold coin. In case there shall be no widow, and a child or children surviving such member, then to such child or children, equally share and share alike. If there shall be neither widow, child, or children surviving such deceased member entitled to receive said money, nor any disposition made of the same, as hereinbefore provided, then there shall be no payment or provision made under this article. The payments herein provided for shall be deemed absolute donations to the persons, or for the object to which the same are made or applied, free from all claim or control from any other source or persons.
In case the increase of said- moneys shall not have accumulated to a sum sufficient to meet the donations herein provided for as the same shall be needed, the deficit shall be made good at once by assessments pro rata upon the members of the board, and collected in like manner and under the same penalties as other dues.”

Of the board Frank Swift was a member from the 21st of August, 1875, until the 6th of January, 1877. As such he had fully complied with all the requirements of the constitution and by-laws, so that, iu the event of his death, his surviving wife and children, or any person or object that he might designate, according to the provisions of article xxii., would be entitled to receive the donation provided by said article. And while a member of the board, he died in the city and county of San Francisco, on the 6th of January, 1877, leaving no wife, or child, or children surviving him; but he left a will which was [569]*569probated, and the plaintiffs, as the executors nominated by the will, were appointed and qualified as executors thereof.

The will contained the following bequests:—

“First—I give and bequeath to my father, Chas. H. Swift, the sum of $12,500; to my mother, Adelia B. Swift, the sum of $12,500; to my sister, Ellen A. Brown, $5,000; to my sister, Maggie M. Mills, $5,000; to my sister, Fannie E. Lohman, $5,000; to my niece, Florence A. Durden, $10,000; to my niece, Millie B. Durden, $5,000; to my niece, Minnie F. Durden, now married to Z. T. Therrel, $5,000. These amounts, aggregating $60,000, I desire paid to said respective legatees within a year after my decease.
“Second—Should my estate be worth more than sixty thousand dollars ($60,000), and I now estimate it at $80,000, including my seat in the San Francisco Stock Exchange Board and the insurance on my life by said board, I give and devise to D. L. McDonald of San Francisco, the brother of my late dearly beloved wife, the sum of $5,000.
“Fifth—The balance of my estate I desire paid over to my mother, Mrs. C. H. Swift, and by her distributed among the poor in any manner she may see proper.”

After the executors had qualified and entered upon the discharge of their duties they made a demand upon the stock and exchange board for payment to them of the donation,” to which they claimed that they as executors were entitled. At the time they made this demand there was sufficient money in the trust fund for payment; but the defendant refused to pay upon the ground that no disposition of the donation” had been made as required by its constitution and by-laws. And seasonably after the demand and refusal, the executors commenced the action in hand to recover against the defendant a money judgment for said sum of $10,000.

The action is founded upon the existence of a contractual relation between the San Francisco Stock and Exchange Board and its members for the payment of $10,000 in case of the death of a member, for which it is claimed his executor or administrator may maintain an action upon section 388 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 388 reads thus:-

[570]*570“ When two or more persons associated in any business, transact such business under a common name, whether it comprise the names of such persons or not, the association may be sued by such common name, the summons in such cases being served on one or more of the associates; and the judgment in the action shall bind the joint property of all the associates in the same manner as if all had been named defendants, and had been sued upon their joint liability.”

The personal representative of a decedent may maintain any action founded upon contract which could be maintained by the decedent if he were alive. (§ 1582, Code Civ. Proc.) But Frank Swift if alive could not maintain an action against the association of which he was a member for the recovery of the sum of $10,000 sought to be recovered in this action, unless the members of the association were associated in a business transacted by them in the name of the association in which they contracted to pay.

The complaint affirms and the answer denies that the members were associated in business, “ and transacted and carried on the business of buying and selling mining and other stocks at the city and county of San Francisco under the common name of the San Francisco Stock and Exchange Board.” Upon the issue thus joined the court finds:—

“ That the defendant is not, and was not at any of the times mentioned in the complaint, an organization of persons or composed of persons who are, or at any of the times mentioned in the complaint have been associated in business, or who transact or carry on the business of buying or selling mining or other stocks, or any other business at the city and county of San Francisco or elsewhere under the common name of ‘the San Francisco Stock and. Exchange Board,’ or under any other name, or at all.”

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Bluebook (online)
8 P. 94, 67 Cal. 567, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swift-v-san-francisco-stock-exchange-board-cal-1885.