Atkins v. Hughes

282 P. 787, 208 Cal. 508, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 419
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1929
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9964.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 282 P. 787 (Atkins v. Hughes) 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
Atkins v. Hughes, 282 P. 787, 208 Cal. 508, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 419 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

In this cause it is ordered that paragraph V of the judgment, which purports to remove L. P. Hughes and G. C. Chase as directors of the Rock Creek Water Corporation, a corporation, be and the same is hereby stricken out. It is further ordered that the judgment in this action also be modified by deducting from the amount $9,767.10, the sum of $450, and that, as so modified, said judgment be and it is hereby affirmed, respondents to recover their costs on appeal.'

This cause was reheard to give further consideration to the question of the power of a court of equity, in the absence of a statute, to remove a director of a private corporation and to declare his office vacant. But on the hearing counsel for each side conceded that the term of office as director of said two men had long since expired; that three annual meetings had been held since the date of said judgment and that the two defendants referred to had been re-elected to office in both the years 1928 and 1929 at the annual stockholders’ meeting. The question, therefore, so far as this action is concerned, has become moot. (Childress v. Dinkelspiel Co., 203 Cal. 262 [263 Pac. 801].) But for the presence of other questions in the cause. it would be our duty to dismiss the appeal. (Weiss v. City of Los Angeles, 190 Cal. 576 [213 Pac. 979].)

There are, however, other questions involved, as to which we are satisfied with our conclusion heretofore announced and, accordingly, we hereby adopt as the opinion of this court, the former opinion written in this case by Mr. Justice Curtis, eliminating therefrom only the discussion of the question above declared to be moot, which former opinion, as here re-adopted, is as follows:

“Action by certain of the stockholders of the Rock Creek Water Corporation against said corporation and five individual defendants. Four of said individual defendants— L. F, Hughes, II. J. Hammond, Stewart Gibson and G. C. *510 Chase—were directors of said corporation and, with the plaintiff 'W. A. Phillips, formed the board of directors of said company. The fifth individual defendant was George W. Hughes, who died subsequent to the commencement of this action, and the same has been dismissed as to his personal representative.
“The facts admitted by the pleadings or proven at the trial show that the Rock Creek Water Company is a) corporation organized under the laws of the state of California ; that said corporation is a mutual water company, and was organized by the owners of certain water rights for the purpose of facilitating the control of said water and the distribution of the same for domestic and irrigation purposes among its owners in proportion to the amount owned by them respectively.. Some time prior to the annual meeting of said corporation in the year 1924 George W. Hughes, through the purchase of the Hammond and Boyce properties and the stock in said corporation representing water used on said properties, became the owner of a large amount of the capital stock in said corporation, and after said purchase the said George W. Hughes and his son, the said L. F. Hughes, owned a majority of the capital stock of said corporation. At the annual meeting of said corporation held in said year the following-named persons were elected directors of said company for the ensuing year: the said L. F. Hughes, the son of said George W. Hughes; Stewart Gibson, the private secretary of George W. Hughes; H. J. Hammond, from whom he purchased the Hammond and Boyce ranches, and who acted as foreman or ranch superintendent of said George W. Hughes up to May 15, 1925; G. C. Chase, who became such foreman after May 15, 1925, and W. A. Phillips, one of the plaintiffs in this action, who represented the minority stockholders of said company upon said board of directors. The directors organized by electing L. F. Hughes president, W. A. Phillips vice-president and G. C. Chase secretary and treasurer of said company. The by-laws of said corporation provide that ‘Delivery (of water) to each .(stockholder) shall be made at some point on the main ditch. ’ The delivery of said water to the stockholders was made by a zanjero,' and it was usually run into small equalizing or distributing reservoirs, from which the water was drawn *511 in a more or less constant flow, these reservoirs not being intended for storage purposes, but rather for distributing purposes. These reservoirs were not owned by the corporation, but by the stockholders, or groups of stockholders, individually, nor were the pipe lines or ditches connecting the main ditch with said reservoirs owned by the company, but by the individual stockholders. There were at least four of these reservoirs, referred to in the evidence as Kendrick reservoirs Nos. 1 and 2, the Hammond reservoir and the Boyce reservoir. The latter two reservoirs had been used by the owners of the Hammond ranch and the Boyce ranch, individually, for some years prior to the time these properties were acquired by George W. Hughes. They were situated below the lowest terminus of the company’s ditch and from ten to fifteen feet lower than the lands of any of the stockholders except said lands of George W. Hughes purchased from Hammond and Boyce. About March 25, 1925, and after George W. Hughes had acquired the Hammond and Boyce ranches, and while he was the owner thereof, the company began enlarging and recementing said reservoirs at the expense of the corporation. On the 7th of April following, at a meeting of the board of directors of said company on that day, deeds to sites of each of said reservoirs, executed by said George W. Hughes in favor of said corporation, were presented to said board of directors. By resolution these were accepted by said board of directors and it was ordered that two reservoirs be constructed upon the land thereby conveyed to be used for the storage of water for irrigation purposes, the cost of such construction to be paid by checks drawn on the funds of said corporation. A further resolution was passed by said board of directors at said meeting levying an assessment of ten cents a share on each share of the capital stock of said corporation, ‘for the purpose of paying expenses, conducting business and paying debts of this corporation. ’ These resolutions were adopted by the affirmative vote of directors Hammond, Gibson and Chase, director Phillips voting in the negative. At the time of the adoption of the said resolutions there was in the treasury the sum of $1,915.62, which was ample for conducting the ordinary business and paying the debts of said corporation. The purpose of levying said assessment was to furnish money *512 ‘to construct, improve, enlarge and cement reservoirs upon the property known as the “Hammond Ranch” and the “Boyce Ranch.” ’ . . . Thereupon, plaintiffs commenced this action to restrain the collection of said assessment; to declare void the proceedings of the board of directors accepting the deed to said reservoir sites and ordering the construction of the reservoirs thereon; for an accounting of the money expended by the directors for the construction, enlargement and cementing of said reservoirs, and for the. removal of the defendant directors. An answer to said complaint was filed on May 29, 1925. On June 12th following the board of directors of said company met and rescinded the resolutions adopted by them on April 5,

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Bluebook (online)
282 P. 787, 208 Cal. 508, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkins-v-hughes-cal-1929.