Court Opinion

ID: 5447551
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:13:28.589059+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:15.138597
License: Public Domain

Searls, C.
This is an appeal by Benjamin Close from the judgment of the superior court in and for Humboldt county adjudging him an insolvent debtor, and from an order denying his application for an allowance from his estate of money sufficient to employ counsel, pay costs, expenses, etc.
The petition is in the following language:
“ In the Superior Court of the County of Humboldt, State of California.

“In the matter of Benjamin Close in insolvency.

“ Creditors’ Petition in Involuntary Insolvency.
“The petition of the hereinafter mentioned creditors respectfully shows:
“ That said respondent, Benjamin Close, is indebted to the following petitioners, all residents of the state of California:
“To Eoot & Sanderson, a partnership, in the sum of $537.26 for goods sold and delivered to said Benjamin Close within twenty-three months last past.
“To H. Levi & Co., a partnership, in the sum of *577$136.30, for goods sold and delivered to said Benjamin Close within twenty-three months last past.
“ To Seller & Bros. Co., a partnership, in the sum of $28.89, for goods sold and delivered to said Benjamin Close within twenty-three months last past.
“ To Getz Bros. & Co., a partnership, in the sum of $79.05, for goods sold and delivered to said Benjamin Close within twenty-three months last past.
“To Wheaton, Breon & Co., a partnership, in the sum of $73.88, for goods sold and delivered to said Benjamin Close within twenty-three months last past.
“ To J. A. Folger & Co., a corporation, in the sum of $285.81, for goods sold and delivered to said Benjamin •Close within twenty-three months last past.
“ That all said demands accrued in this state; that all said sums are due and unpaid, and have not been assigned to the petitioners in whole or in part; that said debtor resides and has his place of business in said county of Humboldt, state of California, and has permitted his property to remain under attachment for over four days, and that he is insolvent and has so been before and ever since said attachment was levied on his property; that the said insolvent has no other property.
“That it is necessary for the preservation of the estate of said debtor that said debtor be restrained from receiving the payment of any debts, and the delivery of any property, and from transferring any property, and that all persons, corporations, or associations indebted to said debtor, or having in their possession property belonging to said debtor, be forbidden to make payment of such debts or to deliver such property to said debtor, or to any one for the use of said debtor.
“Wherefore petitioners pray that the said debtor show cause, at a time and place to be fixed by this honorable court, why he should not be adjudged insolvent, and the surrender of his estate be made for the benefit of his creditors; that no creditor whose debt is provable under said act be allowed to prosecute to final judgment any action therefor against said debtor until the question of *578discharge shall have been determined; and that any and all suits and proceedings be stayed until the further order of the court; that all persons be forbidden to pay any debts to said debtor, or to deliver any property belonging to said debtor to him, or to any person, firm, corporation, or association for his use; that said debtor be forbidden to transfer or deliver any property; and that such further proceedings may be had as the law in such cases prescribes.
“ Jos. Kibk, and Fobd & Burnell, “Attorneys for Petitioners.”
“ State of California, ) „ “City and County of San Francisco.)
“E. M. Root, C. J. Paddock, and Paul Breon, being each severally sworn, doth say on oath: That he is one of the petitioning creditors in this proceeding; that he has heard read the foregoing petition and is acquainted with the contents thereof; that the same is true of his own knowledge, except as to the matters therein stated upon his information or belief, and that as to those matters he believes it to be true; that said E. M. Root is a member of the firm of Root & Sanderson, one of the petitioners herein; that Paul Breon is a member of the firm of Wheaton, Breon & Co., one of the petitioners herein; that C. J. Paddock is vice-president of J. A. Folger & Co. (a corporation), one of the petitioners herein. E. M. Root,
“0. J. Paddock, “Paul Breon.
“ Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3d day of April, 1894.
[seal of notary] “ Samuel Rosenheim,
“Notary Public.”
The respondent therein, who is the appellant here, demurred to the petition upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or petition under the Insolvent Act of 1880.
The demurrer was overruled, and such ruling is assigned as error. The petition is sufficient within the *579rulings of the court in Wright v. Cohn, 88 Cal. 328, and In re Dennery, 89 Cal. 107.
It shows that all of the petitioners are residents of the state of California; that the demands are due, and accrued in this state; the nature and amount of their several demands, and the other facts required by section 8 of the Insolvent Law, approved April 16,1880. (Stats. 1880, p. 82.)
The demurrer was properly overruled.
A motion was also made to strike out the petition, “upon the ground that the same is not verified by three of the petitioners named therein.”
The motion was overruled, and error is predicated upon such ruling.
As will be observed, the affidavit is by three persons, one of whom (C. J. Paddock) swears he is “vice-president of J. A. Folger & Co. (a corporation), one of the petitioners.”
Section 446 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides, in reference to the verifications of pleadings, that, when a corporation is a party, “the verification may be made by any officer thereof.”
A vice-president certainly is or may be an officer of a corporation, and, when he states under oath that he is such officer, it is sufficient. It is not more necessary for a vice-president to set out the fact of his selection as an officer of the corporation than it would be for the president, secretary, or other officer to do so.
A vice-president, or one who acts in the place of and instead of the president, is an officer well known and recognized by the law in incorporated companies.
His statement in an affidavit to a pleading that he is such officer is sufficient to give validity thereto.
The motion on the part of the appellant here for an allowance of two hundred and fifty dollars from his estate to employ counsel and pay expenses, etc., was properly refused for two reasons: 1. The law makes no provision for such an allowance; 2. The petition therefor was insufficient.
*580It did not show the nature or value of the estate. It may well be that the sum asked was in excess of the entire assets of the estate of the insolvent.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
Vanclief, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the • judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Temple, J., Henshaw, J., McFarland, J.