Alfalfa Growers of California, Inc. v. Icardo

256 P. 287, 82 Cal. App. 641, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 827
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1927
DocketDocket No. 4227.
StatusPublished

This text of 256 P. 287 (Alfalfa Growers of California, Inc. v. Icardo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfalfa Growers of California, Inc. v. Icardo, 256 P. 287, 82 Cal. App. 641, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 827 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinions

WORKS, P. J.

— Plaintiff is a nonprofit association, or corporation, organized under the provisions of the Civil *642 Code for the purpose of distributing the product of its members, who axe alfalfa growers. The defendants, as copartners, owned a membership in the organization. This action was commenced for the purpose of enforcing the collection of an unpaid assessment against the membership held by them. The cause was tried by a jury and a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff, but the trial court later made its order granting a new trial. From this order plaintiff appeals.

It is contended by respondents that appellant was without authority to levy assessments against its members, and we think the contention must be upheld. The statute is searched in vain for such authority. There are no provisions whatever directly relating to assessments in the sections of the Civil Code (secs. 653m to 653sc) under which appellant was organized and pursued its existence. It is provided, however, in section 653m that the associations contemplated by it shall have all the “powers granted to private corporations by the laws of this state, except such powers as are inconsistent with those granted by this title.” Section 653q reads, in part: “Bach association incorporated under this title shall have the powers granted by the provisions of this code and other laws of California relating to private corporations ...” Section 653sb provides: “Nothing in this title shall be deemed to prohibit any cooperative association formed or existing hereunder from having and exercising the same powers in carrying out its purposes as are enjoyed or exercised by corporations which issue capital stock.”.

We think these three provisions are not sufficient to clothe appellant with statutory power to levy assessments. The enactments which provide for the levy of assessments by corporations relate exclusively to assessments upon capital stock. To begin with, the article of the Civil Code upon the subject (article II of chapter II of Title I of Part IY of Division First) is headed “Assessments of Stock,” and section 331, which confers the power, reads in part, with our italics: “The directors of any corporation formed or existing under the laws of this state, after one fowrth of its capital stock has been subscribed, may . . . levy and collect assessments upon the subscribed capital stock thereof ...” Appellant has no capital stock, and it would. seem, therefore, *643 whatever is the force to be attributed to those portions of sections 653m, 653q, 653sb which are above quoted, that the language employed is not of sufficient potency to import the provisions of the code relating to assessments of capital stock. In corporations like appellant the basis upon which the right to assess rests is simply nonexistent. And there are particular reasons for the inapplicability of provisions of law relating to assessments to such corporations as appellant. That corporation was organized under a “Title” of the code (secs. 653m to 653sc) which provides for the organization of associations by “persons engaged in the production, preserving, drying, packing, shipping, manufacturing, preparing for market, or marketing of agricultural, viticultura!, or horticultural products, or all of them” (sec. 653m). It is feasible to provide for assessments of capital» stock, for each share of the stock of a given corporation is like all the other shares and an equitable basis exists upon which to make a levy; but what similarity exists, as a foundation for a just and equal assessment, between those members of a corporation like appellant who, respectively, produce, or preserve, or dry, or pack, or ship, or manufacture, or prepare for market, or market either an agricultural, or a viticultura!, or a horticultural product? We can see none, and, on the whole, we are convinced that appellant is possessed of no statutory authority to levy assessments upon its memberships.

There are many decided cases to the effect that the power to levy assessments may be created by contract between a corporation and its members. It is insisted by appellant that it enjoys a power so created, as both its articles of incorporation and by-laws contain provisions attempting to confer the authority.

The difficulties pointed out during our consideration of the question whether appellant enjoyed statutory authority to levy assessments are illustrated and intensified when we come to examine the contention that the right existed by virtue of contract. Appellant’s articles of incorporation provided that the purposes of the organization, in part, were “to promote, foster and encourage the business of growing alfalfa and other hay and straw,” and to aid “in the marketing, processing, warehousing, storing and distribution thereof and of alfalfa products, and by-products, and of *644 other hay products and straw and its products and byproducts”; that each member should “be entitled to one vote and to one unit of interest in the property of the association, and to one additional vote, and one additional unit of interest, for each and every ton of alfalfa or major portion thereof, produced by him or upon his ranch or in affiliated activities owned, operated and controlled by him and sold or listed for sale by the association for him in each year”; that “any person, firm or corporation or manager, or officer of any corporation or member of any firm engaged in the business of producing alfalfa or controlling the production thereof or having any interest in such production . . . may be admitted to membership in the Association and shall have voting power and property rights therein on the same basis «as all other members”; that every member should pay “an entrance or membership fee based upon a specified amount per acre for each and every acre of lands planted to alfalfa and represented by him”; and that the directors should have the right to levy assessments and that notices of assessment “shall be mailed to all of the members and such assessment shall become valid and binding upon all of the members” unless within a certain time “members owning a majority of the property rights herein shall file . . . written dissents or objections thereto.”

It was provided in the by-laws of appellant, in addition to some matters which are practically repeated from the articles of incorporation, that members of the association were of two classes, active members, “to include all members who have any interest, direct or indirect, in the production of alfalfa,” and associate members, “including all other members,” and that the active members were divided into two subclasses, marketing members, “to include all Active Members whose alfalfa acreage is to be marketed, in whole or in part,” and nonmarketing members, “to include all other Active Members”; and that the board of directors should have the right to levy assessments “to carry out any of the legitimate purposes of the Association, each member to be liable prorate in accord with the alfalfa acreage owned, controlled or represented.” Particularly it is to be noticed that the by-laws repeated the clause of the articles of incorporation to the effect that notices of assessment were *645 to be mailed to all members and that assessments were to be enforceable against all.

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Bluebook (online)
256 P. 287, 82 Cal. App. 641, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfalfa-growers-of-california-inc-v-icardo-calctapp-1927.