Bacon v. Grosse

132 P. 1027, 165 Cal. 481, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 448
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1913
DocketL.A. No. 3115.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 132 P. 1027 (Bacon v. Grosse) 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
Bacon v. Grosse, 132 P. 1027, 165 Cal. 481, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 448 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant Charles E. Grosse from a judgment requiring the transfer to the plaintiff of certificates evidencing the ownership of twenty thousand dollars of bonds, and .two hundred shares of the capital stock, of Producers’ Transportation Company, a California corporation. Grosse also appeals from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

It appears that said corporation had authorized an issue of three million five hundred thousand dollars of bonds of the denomination of one thousand dollars each. Said bonds, together with the capital stock of the Producers’ Transportation Company, came into the ownership or under the control of Union Oil Company of California, one of the defendants. *484 On July 1, 1909, said Union Oil Company issued a circular to holders of its stock and of the stock of two affiliated corporations, offering for sale to such holders one million five hundred thousand dollars of bonds of Producers’ Transportation Company, together with a like amount of the stock of said last-named company, at the price of one thousand dollars for each bond and ten shares (of the par value of one hundred dollars each) of the stock.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff, through his agent, W. N. Hamaker, applied to the Union Oil Company to purchase twenty thousand dollars of said bonds and a like amount of stock, but was informed that the subscription should be made in the name of a stockholder of the Union Oil Company or of one of its affiliated companies. Thereupon plaintiff applied to the defendant Crosse, who was a stockholder pf the Union Oil Company, for permission to subscribé for and' purchase such bonds and stock in Crosse’s name. The permission was granted, and a written subscription for twenty thousand dollars of said bonds and stock presented to the Union Oil Company. At the same time Crosse subscribed for a like amount of the bonds and stock in his own behalf. The Union Oil Company awarded and set apart to the plaintiff twenty bonds of the Producers’ Transportation Company and two hundred shares of its capital stock and set apart a like amount of said bonds and stock to Crosse. Pull payment for said bonds and stock was made' by the plaintiff and Crosse, each of them paying to the said Union Oil Company the sum of twenty thousand dollars. On the twenty-eighth day of July, 1909, Crosse executed and delivered to plaintiff bills of sale purporting to transfer to plaintiff twenty bonds and a certificate for two hundred shares of the capital stock of the said Producers’ Transportation Company. Notwithstanding such assignments, notice of which was given to the Union Oil Company, a single certificate for four hundred shares of the capital stock of the Producers’ Transportation Company was issued in the name of Crosse-and delivered to him. The bonds were not issued directly to the purchasers, but were delivered to the Los Angeles Trust & Savings Bank, which, on its part, furnished to the purchasers receipts or certificates reciting that said Trust & Savings Bank held the bonds in trust for such respective purchasers. Such a re *485 ceipt or certificate representing forty bonds was executed in Grosse’s name and delivered to him. It is further alleged that ever since the delivery to- Grosse of the certificate for four hundred shares of the stock and of the trustee’s certificate for forty bonds, said Grosse has claimed to own said stock and bonds, including the one-half thereof bought and paid for by the plaintiff as his own, and refuses to surrender said certificate of stock or said trustee’s certificate for bonds so as to permit a new certificate for two hundred shares of the stock and a trustee’s certificate for twenty bonds to be issued to the plaintiff.

The complaint alleges that the stock and bonds are rapidly advancing in price and that they are now worth in excess of twenty-six thousand dollars. The prayer is for judgment for the sum of forty thousand dollars, that the defendant Grosse be required to surrender to the Producers’ Transportation Company the certificate for four hundred shares of the capital stock and that said certificate be canceled and a new certificate issued tq the plaintiff for two hundred shares; that Grosse be directed to surrender to the Los Angeles Trust & Savings Bank the trustee’s certificate for the forty bonds and that said certificate be canceled and a new one issued to plaintiff for twenty bonds.

Answers were filed denying many of the allegations of the complaint. The answer of the defendant Grosse also set up as. an affirmative defense that the device whereby plaintiff subscribed for stock and bonds of' the Producers’ Transportation Company in the name of said defendant Grosse was a fraud upon the "Onion Oil Company and its stockholders in that it evaded and thwarted the object and intention of said Union Oil Company to limit the right of subscribing to said stock and bonds to the holders of its stock or that of its two affiliated companies. It also alleged a failure of the consideration upon which Grosse permitted plaintiff’s agent Ha-maker to use his (Grosse’s) subscription rights for plaintiff’s benefit, and set up that prior to the filing of his answer he had offered to return plaintiff the sum of twenty thousand dollars paid by him, together with interest, which offer had been refused.

The findings were in favor of plaintiff and followed, substantially, the allegations of the complaint. "With the excep *486 tian of the demand for money damages the judgment was in accord with the prayer of the complaint, that is to say, it required the surrender by Crosse of the certificate of stock and the trustee’s certificate for bonds held by him and the issuance of other certificates for two hundred shares of the stock and for twenty bonds to plaintiff and Crosse respectively.

The findings, so far as they set forth the transaction between plaintiff and Crosse, are fully sustained by documentary evidence, the authenticity of which is not questioned. A circular of the Union Oil Company, offering the stock and bonds of the Producers’ Transportation Company for subscription, had been sent to each of its stockholders and Crosse had received a copy thereof. On July 17, 1909, Hamalcer, who was connected with the First National Bank of Los Angeles, wrote to Crosse a letter, in which he used this language: “For one of our very good customers I very much desire the subscription privileges of some holder of stock of the Union Oil Co. or its affiliated companies, for the bonds, together with the bonus stock, of the Producers’ Transportation Co. ... I recall your having been a very heavy owner of this stock and if you are not going to consume all of your subscription privileges, I would like the same up to $20,000, and am holding that amount with which to pay the same and would make cash payment to the company immediately on their advice to you of allotment.” To this letter Crosse replied on July 18th, stating, in effect, that he desired to subscribe for twenty thousand dollars of the bonds and stock himself, and going on as follows: “Considering the matter still further, I will take $20,000 worth of the bonds, and you may fill out the blank for as much more as you think you want and can get, and all of the excess over a $20,000 allotment you may have. ... If the subscription should be scaled down, however, you will have to provide only for such an amount, in excess of the $20,000, which I want, as the allotment calls for.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P. 1027, 165 Cal. 481, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bacon-v-grosse-cal-1913.