Frederick v. North Side Water Co.
Before: Hanson
[490]
HANSON, J. pro tem.
This is an appeal from a judgment entered upon an order sustaining a demurrer of defendant corporation to plaintiff’s second amended complaint without leave to amend. The action was for declaratory relief, with a prayer for damages in the sum of $6,463. The grounds of demurrer were: (1) that no cause of action was stated and (2) that the complaint was uncertain, ambiguous and unintelligible.
The complaint alleges that during the period 1926 to 1935 plaintiff had a right to “allocate” such shares of defendant company’s corporate stock as it might issue and sell; that defendant company in 1934 represented to plaintiff that it was indebted to a creditor in the sum of $10,000 and that it was essential, if it were to continue in business, that it borrow this sum so as to pay the creditor; that the defendant company represented to the plaintiff that it could not borrow the money unless it could settle its controveries with him and eliminate his right in the future to allocate any of its corporate stock; that a written contract (annexed to the complaint) was entered into that disposed of the controversy; that the plaintiff on his part promptly complied with all the covenants thereof but that defendants did not; that two years later— in 1937—the company gave notice of its cancellation of the contract; that thereafter plaintiff demanded of defendant company that it fulfill the terms of the contract or, in the alternative, that it “return to him the rights, interests, privileges, beneficial interest and equities” that he had “held, owned and enjoyed prior to” the execution of the written contract mentioned; that defendant had refused all of plaintiff’s demands, and that an actual controversy exists between the parties concerned relative to their respective legal rights and duties. The prayer is for a declaration as to the rights, privileges, equities and duties of the respective parties and for a judgment of $6,463 in favor of plaintiff.
What is meant by the pleader by his reference in the complaint to allocating stock is not stated, nor is there any statement of the “rights, privileges or equities” he claims subsisted in the period prior to the written contract. No factual basis for a recovery of money is alleged. Moreover, there is nothing in the complaint which would give the trial judge the slightest notion as to what the supposed controversy was about, except for what little he could gather from the complaint, the substance of which we have narrated here.
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