Beal v. United Properties Co.

189 P. 346, 46 Cal. App. 287, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 805
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2728.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 189 P. 346 (Beal v. United Properties Co.) 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. United Properties Co., 189 P. 346, 46 Cal. App. 287, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 805 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

This action, like that of Beal v. Smith et al., ante, p. 271, [189 Pac. 341], involves the transactions growing out of the organization of the United Properties Company in December, 1910. The demurrers of the several defendants to the amended complaint were all sustained without leave to amend, and judgment entered in their favor. The appeal is taken from this judgment and the parties have stipulated that the briefs filed in both actions may be considered on each appeal.

The amended complaint alleges that on the sixth day of March, 1911, plaintiff was the owner of first mortgage bonds of the Sierra Water Supply Company and of a claim against such company of the total value of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars; that on said day the United Properties Company agreed to deliver to him therefor one hundred and fifty thousand dollars in its first mortgage and collateral trust five per cent fifty-year sinking fund gold bonds, to be secured by a deed of trust to be thereafter executed covering all the real and personal property of the United Properties Company; that between the sixth and twentieth days of March, 1911, in compliance with said agreement, plaintiff assigned and delivered to the United Properties Company his bonds and the claim against the Sierra Water Supply Company; that in April, 1911, the United Properties *290 Company issued to him bond certificates, the material features of which are that the company on the surrender of the certificates, promised to issue to the bearer first mortgage and collateral trust five per cent fifty-year sinking fund gold bonds, “to be issued under and secured by the deed of trust in preparation, dated January 1, 1911, made by said The United Properties Company of California, and to be delivered hereunder as and when the said bonds may be certified, issued and ready for delivery.” Such certificates called for the issue to plaintiff of one hundred and fifty of said bonds of the par value of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. It is alleged that neither the bonds nor the deed of trust were ever executed, and that from time to time covering a period, at one time alleged to have ended on the twenty-fifth day of January, 1913, and at another time alleged to have ended in the month of March, 1914, the United Properties Company represented to plaintiff that said bonds and said deed of trust were in course of preparation and that they would soon be executed and the bonds delivered to him on the surrender of his bond certificates. In pursuance of a scheme and design to defraud the plaintiff and to cause him to rely upon said promises, so it is alleged, the United Properties Company paid to him on the first days of July, 1911, January, 1912, and July, 1912, the amounts of money that he would have been entitled to receive on said days as interest on the bonds if the same had been executed and delivered to him. Also that plaintiff fully believed and relied upon these promises until May, 1914, although in another portion of the complaint it is alleged that long prior to that time plaintiff, having made a personal investigation of the affairs of the company, had discovered a gigantic conspiracy on the part of the promoters of the concern to-defraud the company and the holders of its stocks and securities, other than the said promoters. It is then alleged that plaintiff had not received any of said bonds and had not received or been paid any part of the said one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and that the same is still due, owing, and unpaid. The remainder of the complaint is a long story of a conspiracy on the part of the promoters of the corporation, Smith, Tevis, and Hanford alleging that the organization of the company was conceived in fraud and that all the transactions of the promoters, and those acting *291 under them, were a fraud upon the corporation and the other holders of its stock and securities. These allegations are all made upon information and belief, with some feeble attempt to state the sources of the information and the grounds of the belief.

Treating the appeal in the same manner as would be done by a trial court in the consideration of the demurrers, as the grounds for" the order sustaining them are not stated, it is first necessary to determine what are the equities of plaintiff’s case.

It is strenuously argued in the hriefs of the respondents that the complaint attempts to state several causes of action which it is claimed are improperly joined. Thus, it is argued that the allegations of the complaint tend to support three separate causes of action personal to plaintiff and one, on behalf of the United Properties Company, as follows: (1) A cause of action to declare and foreclose an equitable lien upon property formerly owned by the United Properties Company; (2) a cause of action for the specific performance of an oral contract; (3) a cause of action for damages for fraud growing out of the failure to perform the same contract; and (4). a cause of action to recover on behalf of the corporation assets of the corporation which are alleged to have been illegally disposed of. It is stated in the complaint that the suit was instituted in behalf of all other lien claimants similarly situated with plaintiff who chose to join with plaintiff, but as the record does not disclose that any others joined, this matter may be dismissed from consideration. It becomes necessary first to. determine whether the allegations of the complaint are sufficient to support any cause of action.

[1] (1) Taking the first-mentioned cause of action—that to declare and foreclose an equitable lien—in so far as the foreclosure is concerned, the complaint is lacking in one of the essential features of such an action, which is an allegation of default. This complaint alleges an oral agreement to deliver to the plaintiff 150 first mortgage bonds of the par value of one thousand dollars each, dated January 1, 1911, to be “due and payable fifty years after the date thereof.” The bond certificates issued to plaintiff in April, 1911, and which he argues are written evidences of its oral agreement, also provide for the issuance of fifty-year bonds, *292 secured by a deed of trust which was to be dated January 1, 1911. Though it is alleged that three semi-annual payments of interest were received by the plaintiff, it is not alleged that this was all the interest that he received, or, in fact, that all interest payments were not made to him semiannually as called for by the original agreement. Furthermore, it is not alleged that the corporation had defaulted in any of the interest payments, or that the company was insolvent or unable to pay the interest. Thus, if plaintiff is entitled to an equitable lien in accordance with his agreement of March, 1911, he cannot foreclose on such lien unless there has been a default. There are no allegations in the complaint from which it could be inferred that such default has occurred.

[2] In seeking to subject the personal property to a lien plaintiff is in effect asking for the specific performance of his contract of 1911.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 346, 46 Cal. App. 287, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beal-v-united-properties-co-calctapp-1920.