Alexander v. State Capital Co.

70 P.2d 619, 9 Cal. 2d 304, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 397
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1937
DocketS. F. 15702
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 70 P.2d 619 (Alexander v. State Capital Co.) 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
Alexander v. State Capital Co., 70 P.2d 619, 9 Cal. 2d 304, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 397 (Cal. 1937).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of those plaintiffs whose claims were not dismissed prior to judgment in an action brought to establish their claims against the California Mutual Building & Loan Association, in process of liquidation, after rejection thereof by the Building & Loan Commissioner, and after a schedule of the rejected claims had been filed in the Superior Court of Santa Clara County.

The claims are all based upon fraud and arise out of the following situation: The State Capital Company was organ *307 ized in the early part of 1929 for the purpose of acquiring the guarantee stock of the California Mutual Building & Loan Association and, perhaps, the guarantee stock of other building and loan associations. An option was outstanding by which a great majority of the guarantee stock of the California Mutual Building & Loan Association might be acquired and the State Capital Company, by arrangements which it is not necessary to detail, became entitled to exercise the option. For our purposes, it is sufficient to say that the Sta-te Capital stock was divided into preferred and common shares, the preferred being a 7 per cent cumulative preferred and the common stock being entitled to the remainder of the dividends declared. Along in August or September, 1929, the State Capital Company launched a campaign for the purpose of selling its preferred capital stock and, in connection therewith, some of its common stock, the units consisting of one share of preferred and one share of Class “A” common, to be sold for the price of $125 a unit. This campaign continued until some time in February, 1931. As a result, the Capital Company became the owners of approximately 90 or 92 per cent of the guarantee stock of the California Mutual Building & Loan Association.

The complaint alleges that the fraud complained of consisted of the sale of the capital stock contrary to the permit of the Corporation Commissioner, and false statements made to the plaintiffs, as investors in the Building & Loan Association, that it was necessary, in order to save such investors, to convert their holdings into capital stock of the Capital Company; that the transaction was of great financial benefit to each plaintiff and that the Capital Company was a mere holding company of the California Mutual Building & Loan Association and was the owner of all the assets and property of the California Mutual Building & Loan Association. The court found in accordance with these allegations, specifically finding that the permit was violated, because there was not exhibited to and left with the subscriber and purchaser a copy thereof. It was also alleged that at all times the California Mutual Building & Loan Association and the State Capital Company were allied and subsidiary corporations and that the conversion of the deposits or investments of the plaintiffs into the capital stock of the Capital Company was accomplished by a mere book entry upon the books of the *308 corporations. The court also found in accordance with these allegations and also found in accordance with another allegation of the complaint that the plaintiffs were induced by the California Mutual Building & Loan Association to withdraw the amount of their investments from the Building & Loan Association and invest in the capital stock of the Capital Company by means of false representations already mentioned. . The principal contentions of the appellants are: that the evidence does not support the findings; that the court erred in admitting evidence which purported to tend to prove agency; that the claimed false representations were not actionable; that the mutual shareholders of the Building & Loan Association were not entitled to have their claims established; and that the claims were barred by section 13.16 of the Building & Loan Act, which provides that action must be started and service had within four months after the schedule of rejected claims is filed with the court.

Considering first the question of whether the evidence is sufficient to support the findings, there are at least two representations which were made practically to all of the respondents—perhaps there are two or three instances in which the language was changed but, in almost every instance, it was represented to the respondents that they would be receiving 7 per cent instead of 6 per cent interest, which they were receiving on investment certificates and passbook accounts. Many of the respondents were also given to understand that they would also share in the profits above the 7 per cent, by reason of their ownership of common stock and by reason of the ownership by the Capital Company of the guarantee stock of the Building & Loan Association. It was also almost universally stated that the transaction was a good business transaction and would be a financial benefit to the respondent. In considering whether these representations were false, we must note that, with one exception, all the sales were made subsequent to the crash of October, 1929, and that all of them were made long after the recession of real estate values had set in. It is true that the capital stock structure of the Capital Company called' for the payment of 7 per cent dividends on the preferred stock and that the common stock was entitled to share in the net earnings in excess of the amount necessary to pay these dividends, but it is also true that, with an insignificant exception, the total earnings of the *309 Capital Company were to be received by way of dividends upon the guarantee stock of the Building & Loan Association owned by it. As an indication of what effect the recession in real estate values had upon the earnings of the Building & Loan Association is the fact that during 1930 the Building & Loan Association paid no dividends upon its guarantee stock, although it may be added parenthetically that the Capital Company paid two dividends in that year, the source of which must have been the capital paid in by the stockholders. The question may be reduced to this: Assuming that the Building & Loan Association was a party to the representations made by the agents, was it an actionable representation to state that it would be a good thing and a financial benefit to those persons who had funds, ordinarily withdrawable and bearing 6 per cent interest, to convert such funds into capital stock of a corporation holding its guarantee stock? Undoubtedly, with the lessening of the value of real estate, the Building & Loan Association was having difficulty in lending its funds and was finding its mortgage securities somewhat in danger. We are compelled to hold, in view of the absolute knowledge of the Building & Loan Association, contrary to the statements made and in view of the confidence of the respondents in the association hereafter mentioned, that a representation to the effect stated, under the circumstances, was a false actionable representation. In other words, under the circumstances here involved, the representations amounted to “the suggestion, as a fact, of that which is not true, by one who does not believe it to be true” within the meaning of subdivision 1 of section 1572 of the Civil Code defining actual fraud.

We have assumed, in answering the question stated, that the Building &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 P.2d 619, 9 Cal. 2d 304, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-state-capital-co-cal-1937.