Bloom v. Michigan Salmon Mining Co.

This action was brought for the purpose of dissolving a copartnership alleged to exist between the plaintiff and the defendant Grant, said partnership being in regard to the ownership, working and development of the Red Hill and Cash hydraulic placer mines, situated in Siskiyou county, and to have it adjudged that the contract made by said Grant with the defendant corporation (under which the corporation is alleged to be in possession of the mining property, and claiming to own the same, and is alleged to be working same) is void as to this plaintiff, and that the said corporation be required to account for the value of all the minerals extracted by it from the said mine. The complaint prays that a receiver be appointed, and that it be decreed that the contract made between defendant Grant and the defendant corporation is void.

On motion of defendant Grant, accompanied by a demand and affidavit of merits as to Grant, the place of trial of the action was ordered changed from the city and county of San Francisco to the county of Sonoma, that being the county in which said Grant resides and in which he resided at the time of the commencement of the action. This appeal is from the order changing the place of trial to Sonoma county.

Defendant Michigan Salmon Mining Company moved to dismiss the appeal, on the ground that the appeal now presents only a moot question, because the plaintiff has settled *Page 124 with defendant Grant. The notice is accompanied by a copy of an agreement made between plaintiff and defendant Grant, dated December 10, 1906, by the terms of which it appears that upon the payment of the sum of $375 to plaintiff by defendant Grant at the times and in the manner specified by said contract, the plaintiff will release defendant Grant from all claims and demands of every kind, including the matters embraced in said litigation.

It is not made to appear, by affidavit or otherwise, that defendant Grant has ever paid to the plaintiff the said $375, or any part thereof. It is further expressly stated in said agreement that the plaintiff reserves all rights against the defendant corporation. If the complaint is true, the plaintiff is entitled to relief against the corporation. But be this as it may, we cannot decide the merits of the controversy, nor as to whether or not the settlement with Grant would of itself release the defendant corporation, on this motion to dismiss the appeal. The plaintiff is seeking relief against both defendants. The allegations in regard to the agreement of settlement are as to one defendant. The motion is therefore denied.

As to the order changing the place of trial, the record does not show anything as to the place of residence or the principal place of business of the defendant corporation; nor is there any affidavit of merits made by or on behalf of said corporation. So far as the record shows, the defendant corporation may have no defense to the said action on its merits. The burden was upon the moving party to show that none of the defendants are residents of the county in which the action was brought. (Hearne v. De Young, 111 Cal. 376, [43 P. 1108].) The principal place of business of a corporation is its residence within the meaning of the code as to the change of place of trial. (Jenkins v. California Stage Co., 22 Cal. 538;Cohn v. Central Pacific R. R. Co., 71 Cal. 489, [12 P. 498];McSherry v. Penn. C. G. M. Co., 97 Cal. 641, [32 P. 711].)

The order is therefore reversed.

Kerrigan, J., and Hall, J., concurred. *Page 125