Beal v. Smith

189 P. 341, 46 Cal. App. 271, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 619
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2727.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 189 P. 341 (Beal v. Smith) 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
Beal v. Smith, 189 P. 341, 46 Cal. App. 271, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 619 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

On February 24, 1916, plaintiff as a stockholder in the United Properties Company, commenced this action on behalf of the company and its stockholders to recover from certain defendants property alleged to belong to the corporation, 'to set aside alleged fraudulent conveyances of said properties, for the cancellation of securities alleged to have been fraudulently issued, for damages, and other in *273 cidental relief. The company was joined as a party defendant because it refused to institute the action after demand. The defendants demurred separately to the complaint upon both general and special grounds. The several demurrers were sustained without leave to amend, and thereupon judgment was entered in favor of the defendants.

It is alleged in the amended complaint that on the twenty-fifth day of October, 1910, the defendants Smith and Tevis, who owned or controlled more than three-fourths of the issued capital stock of the San Francisco, Oakland & San Jose Consolidated Railway, Oakland Traction Company, Bay Cities Water Company, and other corporations designated in the complaint as “going companies,” entered into an agreement for the incorporation of the United Properties Company upon a capitalization of two hundred million dollars to take over and control their interests in the said “going companies.” In December, 1910, the United Properties Company was incorporated by the defendants Smith, Tevis, and Hanford, the latter, it is alleged, having been brought in as a partner of Tevis. The organization of the company was controlled by these three, who continued to designate and control the directors and officers during the time when the acts complained of were done. Immediately after the organization of the company, Tevis and Hanford turned over to it all the stocks of the companies owned or controlled by them which were agreed to be delivered under the agreement of October 25, 1910, and received therefor securities issued by the United Properties Company on the basis of exchange provided in said agreement. Smith also received his full allotment of securities of the United Properties Company on the same basis of exchange, but failed to deliver a considerable portion of the securities theretofore held by him and included in the promotion agreement and which it was said were covered by pledges as security for money borrowed by him.

In addition to the securities in these “going companies” which were turned over by the individual defendants,' the agreement of October, 1910, called for the transfer of securities of the United Properties Company to Smith and Tevis in exchange for the stocks of four other corporations, which are designated in the complaint and referred to throughout the briefs as the “fraudulent companies,” the reason for *274 this being that they had not been incorporated at the time of the agreement and that, though subsequently incorporated, they never owned any property or had any assets of any nature. However, for the purpose of carrying out the agreement of October, 1910, four companies were organized under the names of Consolidated California Land Company, Sacramento Short Line, San Jose Short Line, and Santa Clara Land & Water Company. The San Jose Short Line was incorporated for eight million dollars; the other three for ten million dollars each. The entire capital stock of all four corporations was issued to defendants Smith, Tevis and Han-ford. Then another corporation, designated the Pacific Terminal Company, was incorporated for five million dollars. Its entire capital stock was likewise issued to defendants Smith, Tevis, and Hanford. Then these defendants turned the entire capital stock of these five companies, amounting to forty-three million dollars on paper, into the treasury of the United Properties Company and received in payment therefor stocks of that company amounting to over sixty-one million dollars and convertible debentures amounting to over thirty-one million dollars, by reason of which it is alleged the three defendants named fraudulently received secret profits from the United Properties Company while acting in the capacity of promoters thereof,0 and that these secret profits and fraudulent acts, as well as the fact that none of the five fraudulent companies had any assets, were concealed from all subsequent stockholders thereof until the same was discovered by plaintiff some time in the year 1913.

It is then alleged that immediately following the organization of the United Properties Company the three defendants named had issued to themselves, six million dollars of bond certificates of that company in consideration for an option which it was pretended the defendant Tevis held for the purchase of certain other stocks or property of the “going companies,” while as a matter of fact no such option existed. It is, therefore, alleged that this issue of six million dollars of certificates was a fraud upon the company, being wholly without consideration to the company, and, like the exchange for the stocks in the “fraudulent companies,” constituted secret profits abstracted by the promoters and concealed from the subsequent stockholders. The stocks and securities comprising this total of secret profits, amounting to over ninety- *275 nine million dollars, plaintiff prays to be delivered up to the United Properties Company and canceled.

Upon the theory that the defendants Smith, Tevis, and Hanford had entered into a general conspiracy to defraud the United Properties Company and its stockholders, it is alleged that the three named defendants, while still having full control over the affairs of the company, permitted the defendant Smith to delay the delivery of a portion of the certificates of stocks in the “going companies” which he had agreed to transfer to the United Properties Company, and for which he had been paid by that company. In May, 191.3, defendant Smith, it is alleged, transferred all his interest in said pledged stocks to the Mercantile Trust Company, as trustee for the benefit of himself, his family and his creditors. And it is. alleged that the Mercantile Trust Company received said stocks, not as an innocent bona fide purchaser, but as a voluntary grantee with notice. Then, it is alleged, these stocks, though pledged, were exchanged by Smith for shares of the San Francisco-Oakland Terminal Railways, a new corporation organized for the consolidation of three of the “going companies.”

The Oakland Railways was incorporated by the defendants Smith, Tevis, and Hanford for the purpose of holding and owning corporation stocks and securities acquired by the United Properties Company, which, in turn, owned all the stock in the Oakland Railways. On May 5, 1913, defendants Smith, Tevis, and Hanford conveyed all their stock in the United Properties Company to five trustees, who were empowered to control the board of directors of said company and all its constituent corporations. The three defendants named, having full control of the United Properties Company, caused it to join in this conveyance and consent to its terms.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 341, 46 Cal. App. 271, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beal-v-smith-calctapp-1920.