Welsbach Co. v. State of California

275 P. 436, 206 Cal. 556, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 637
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1929
DocketDocket No. S.F. 13239.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 275 P. 436 (Welsbach Co. v. State of California) 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
Welsbach Co. v. State of California, 275 P. 436, 206 Cal. 556, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 637 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This was an action instituted by the plaintiff, a foreign corporation, against the state of *557 California and the Secretary of State and State Treasurer thereof, to recover certain license taxes paid by plaintiff to the state under protest during the years 1926 and 1927, pursuant to the requirement of section 3 of the Corporation License Act of 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 422, DBering’s Gen. Laws, Act 1743), and which section of said act was subsequently held to be unconstitutional by the decision of this court in the case of Perkins Mfg. Co. v. Jordan, 200 Cal. 667 [254 Pac. 551]. The respondents, through the attorney-general, demurred to the complaint upon the ground of a lack of jurisdiction in the court over the defendants or the subject of the action, the attorney-general contending that as to the state there existed no law which permitted it to be sued upon the cause of action set forth in the complaint, and that as to the other two defendants, they were not liable upon said cause of action, either in their official or individual capacity. The trial court sustained the demurrer with leave to the plaintiff to amend and upon the failure of the plaintiff so to do judgment was entered in the defendants’ favor. It is from such judgment that this appeal has been taken. It is the contention of the appellant that the trial court was in error in sustaining the demurrer and in entering the judgment appealed from for the reason that, as to the state of ' California, statutory authority exists which would entitle the plaintiff to maintain this action. In making this contention appellant relies upon the act of the legislature approved February 28, 1893 (Stats. 1893, p. 57), and entitled, “An act to authorize suits against the State and regulating the procedure therein.” Section 1 of the act provides as follows: “All persons who have, or shall hereafter have, claims on contract or for negligence against the State not allowed by the State Board of Examiners, are hereby authorized, on the terms and conditions herein contained, to bring suit thereon against the State in any of the Courts of this State of competent jurisdiction, and prosecute the same to final judgment. The rules of practice in civil cases shall apply to such suits, except as herein otherwise provided.” It must be conceded that the action which the plaintiff has instituted is an action, in form at least, upon an implied contract. It is one of that class of actions which .has long been recognized in this state as being maintainable under the form of the common-law action in *558 assumpsit, under which one who has come into the possession of the money of another, to which in law he is not entitled, may be required to restore such money to the rightful owner thereof. In order to effect such restoration the courts, at common law and in many states have recognized the fiction of an implied contract and have permitted recovery thereon under the form of the common-law action. Prior to the year 1893 such actions or causes of actions, while. existing as recognized forms of recovery in that class of actions, between individuals, had not been permitted to be maintained against the state itself, with the result that persons having just and equitable rights to receive back from the state moneys which they had paid into its treasury under the compulsion of laws which were thereafter found to be invalid, were without remedy other than by way of appeal for relief through special act of the legislature. Prior, also, to 1893 persons having causes of action against the state for injuries arising by reason of the negligence of its officials or employees were not permitted a recovery against the state in the courts, but were relegated to the uncertain mercies of the legislature for relief. It was doubtless for the purpose of a definite departure from the long-held rule of law that the sovereign could not be made a party to actions of any sort against it without its consent, that the legislature of California, in its wisdom, saw fit to adopt the act of 1893, above referred to. The title of said act, as we have seen, is general and remedial and indicated the purpose of the legislature to so far work a departure from the old hard rule of nonliability as to permit those classes of actions to be maintained against the state which are expressly referred to in the section of the act above quoted. When we turn to the body of the act and of said section thereof we find that its language is also broadly general and inclusive. It provides that “All persons who have, or shall hereafter have, claims on contract or for negligence against the state . . . are hereby authorized ... to bring suit thereon against the state.” It would seem from the foregoing language that it was the intent of the legislature to embrace within the permissive terms of said statute those two great divisions or forms of actions which are included within the phrases “ex contractu” and “ex delicto” and which embrace, generally speaking, all those forms of *559 actions through which remedies between individuals are sought in courts of justice. The phrase in said statute “claims on contract” has been quite generally held to mean and to refer to “causes of actions upon contract” (Gray v. Palmer, 9 Cal. 616, 636; Northwestern Bank v. State, 18 Wash. 76 [42 L. B. A. 33, 50 Pac. 586]; Biddock v. State, 68 Wash. 389 [Ann. Cas. 1913E, 1033-, 42 L. B. A. (N. S.) 251, 123 Pac. 460]), while in Lewis’ Sutherland on Statutory Construction, second edition, section 400, it is stated that, “All demands against the state for the payment of money are claims, whether express or implied.” The word “contract” used in said section of the statute must, according to the ordinary rules of interpretation, be held to bear the same meaning which is given to the word generally in the codes and statutes of the state. By the terms of section 1619 of the Civil Code, “A contract is either express or implied.” By section 1620 thereof it is stated that, “An express contract is one of the terms of which are stated in words,” while in section 1621 thereof it is set forth that, “An implied contract is one, the existence and terms of which are manifested by conduct.” In the light of the foregoing definitions and decisions we are constrained to hold that the legislature in the use of the phrase “claims upon contract” intended to mean and to refer to “causes of actions upon contract, express or implied.” If our foregoing interpretation of the aforesaid clause in said statute is correct, we find direct authority for the application thereof to actions of the character of this one in the case of State of Indiana v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., etc., 175 Ind. 59 [42 L. B. A. (N. S.) 256, 93 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
275 P. 436, 206 Cal. 556, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welsbach-co-v-state-of-california-cal-1929.