Court Opinion

ID: 3306034
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:20:53.725996+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:33:10.232214
License: Public Domain

This appeal is taken from a judgment rendered upon defendant's failure to answer after his general demurrer to the complaint had been overruled. *Page 422 
In the complaint was alleged an agreement whereby William J. Eva, the plaintiff, sold to the defendant, Walter Andersen, forty-one shares of the capital stock of Andrew Smith Company upon the consideration expressed in a written agreement that defendant would hold plaintiff "free and harmless from any debts or liabilities of said company, for which he may be obligated or liable as a stockholder, director, or other officer of said corporation, up to the amount of two thousand dollars." The essential averment of the complaint is as follows: "Plaintiff on the 31st day of May, 1911, paid to The Bank of California, a corporation, as assignee of San Francisco National Bank, a corporation, the sum of two thousand seven hundred and twenty dollars ($2,720.00) in full settlement of his liability as a stockholder of said Andrew Smith Company, a corporation, for and on account of an indebtedness of said Andrew Smith Company, a corporation, evidenced by a certain promissory note of said Andrew Smith Company, a corporation, executed to the said San Francisco National Bank, on the 20th day of June, 1908." This is followed by an allegation that defendant failed after demand to pay the sum of two thousand dollars and a prayer for that sum together with costs.
Defendant contends that his demurrer was improperly overruled for a number of reasons. These are that the indemnitor promised to pay no debts of the Smith Company but to hold the indemnitee free and harmless from the debts and liabilities of that corporation; that the complaint fails to show that the note was due from the corporation; or that the note did not run for more than three years; or the amount of the note; that the complaint fails to show that the note had not been previously paid or that plaintiff had been called upon to pay it or that he had paid it after notice to the indemnitor; that the complaint fails to show that plaintiff was a stockholder of the corporation at the time when the corporation incurred the indebtedness evidenced by the note; and that the complaint fails to show that plaintiff had become liable on any given date, or that judgment had been rendered against him or that he had otherwise complied with the provisions of subdivisions 5 and 6 of section 2778 of the Civil Code. Plaintiff asserts that the complaint is sufficient as against a general demurrer. He insists that such a demurrer should not be sustained *Page 423 
except when the complaint entirely fails to state some fact necessary to uphold the judgment and that his complaint in the action at bar does set forth all such facts either directly or by reasonable inference. (Citing Lawrence National Bank v. Kowalsky,105 Cal. 44 [38 P. 517].) He also calls attention to the rule that, as against a general demurrer, a complaint which alleges necessary elements of an action not directly but by way of recital, is good (citing Fuller Desk Co. v. McDade, 113 Cal. 360, [45 P. 694]). He also invokes the familiar rule that where all essential facts are stated, but are imperfectly set forth, the particular defects may be reached by special demurrer only. We will examine the complaint in the light of these liberal rules.
It will be noted that according to the complaint the payment of two thousand seven hundred dollars was made by plaintiff "in full settlement of his liability as a stockholder of said Andrew Smith Company." While this recital might have fallen before a special demurrer, as against a general demurrer it is a sufficient allegation that plaintiff was liable as a stockholder, with all that such a statement implies.
It is settled in California that a stockholder's liability accrues immediately upon a debt being contracted by the corporation. A creditor therefore need not resort to the assets of the corporation before proceeding against the stockholder.(Hunt v. Ward, 99 Cal. 613, [37 Am. St. Rep. 87, 34 P. 335].) The indemnitor here held the indemnitee free and harmless not from damages but from liability or debts of the corporation for which he might be obligated as a stockholder. As the indemnity was against liability, the right of recovery on the contract arose as soon as the liability was incurred. In Showers v.Wadsworth, 81 Cal. 272, [22 P. 663], an action on a bond given to indemnify a sheriff against loss and liability which might be incurred by him in delivering certain property to the indemnifier, this court said: "The indemnity was againstliability and hence there was a right of recovery upon the contract as soon as the liability was incurred."
This seems to be a complete answer to nearly all of the arguments of the defendant. It is true that, as appellant contends, the indemnitor did not agree to pay any debt or liability of the Smith Company but he did agree to pay any such debt or liability, for which plaintiff might be bound as a *Page 424 
stockholder of that corporation. It is true also that if the corporation had paid any given debt plaintiff would have been relieved of any obligation to settle it, but the indemnity was not for damages growing out of a suit by a creditor of the Smith Company against the plaintiff on his stockholder's liability — it was upon the liability itself, and if he chose to pay the claim without suit he might do so or he even might sue before
payment (Civ. Code, sec. 2778, subd. 1). Of course in either case he would be under the necessity of proving that he was liable for the amount alleged because of his position as a stockholder.
The answer to appellant's contention that the complaint is defective in not alleging that the note sued upon was due is that the pleading does not declare upon the note but upon an indebtedness evidenced by the note. The stockholder's liability depends not upon the time when the debt was enforceable against the corporation by the holder of the note but upon the time when the indebtedness was incurred. (Hunt v. Ward, 99 Cal. 613, [37 Am. St. Rep. 87, 34 P. 335]; Bank of San Luis Obispo v. PacificCoast S.S. Co., 103 Cal. 595, [37 P. 499].)
It was not necessary to allege that the note mentioned was not a three-year note. It was not necessary to plead even that the statute of limitations was not available against the indebtedness itself because the statute furnishes a personal defense which may be waived by the person entitled to use it.
Neither was it necessary to aver the face value of the note because, as we have seen, the declaration was on the indebtedness and not the note. For the same reason it was not necessary for the pleader to state that the note was unpaid, because the statement of Eva's liability as a stockholder involved the existence of an unsatisfied indebtedness. The statement of that liability of Eva, as a stockholder, for the payment of the corporation's debt, or his proportion thereof, while not a model of pleading was nevertheless sufficient to carry the necessary implication that he owned stock in the corporation when the particular indebtedness involved was contracted by the Smith Company.
It is the contention of appellant that as there is no allegation of a suit and an opportunity on the part of the indemnitor to defend, he is entitled to regard the payment made by Eva *Page 425 
as being merely voluntary; but as we have indicated above, notice is not necessary in such a case as this and much less is it necessary that the indemnifier be given an opportunity to defend any suit. While subdivision 4 of section 2778 of the Civil Code specifies that notice may be given to the person indemnifying, it does not make such notice compulsory. The two following subdivisions of that section merely declare rules of evidence under which a judgment recovered against the person indemnified may become prima facie or conclusive evidence of liability in his action against the person indemnifying. "The omission to give notice to the indemnitor does not go to the right of action against him but simply changes the burden of proof and imposes upon the indemnitee the necessity of again litigating and establishing all of the actionable facts." (22 Cyc. of L. and P., 106.)
It follows, from the foregoing discussion that the indemnitee was not bound to submit to a suit before paying the amount for which he was liable. This matter is settled by the provisions of our code which we have cited above. Of course, if the person indemnified pays any sum upon the theory that he is liable as a stockholder to make such settlement, he is bound to show in a suit against the indemnitor that the liability existed and that he was under obligation to pay it. This is the burden which he assumes, but he is not bound to await and to defend an action intended to fix his liability as a stockholder before he may seek relief on his rights existing under the contract of indemnity.
The judgment is affirmed.
Henshaw, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred. *Page 426